Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 246, Decatur, Adams County, 18 October 1951 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
I SPORTSI
Jackets End Home Season Friday Night The Decatar Yellow Jackets will wind up their home football season Friday night, entertaing the Columbia City Eagles at Worthman field? in this city, with the opening kickoff at 7:30 p.in? - I \ The game will also be the final Northeastern Indiana conference i engagement for the Jackets, who -will be seeking their first loop victory. ? - Columbia City has won two NEIC contests, defeating New Haven and Garrett; lost one, to Auburn, played, a 21-21 tie with the Bluffton Tigers. : /. The Jackets’ final two-games will be played on the road, at Hartford City next Tuesday night, and at Fort Wayne Central Friday., Nov. 2. The NEIC championship may be determined Friday night,/ when Auburn and Warsaw tangle at War saw. These teams, co-champions ■ last season, have won four games each without'a defeat. In their dos, 1 '■ 111 ■A%% y 1 ■ I — TODAY — Continuous from 1:30 ‘KATIE DID IT” Ann Blyth, Mark Stevens BE SURE TO ATTEND! —o FRI. &SAT. ROARING THROUGHCHINA TODAY!., comes an exciting drama of intrigue I If I ? IHI si■ I ' na 4 k l NtOMCnoi BTANPfMB ■ ■■— . — — UOBB PM CORINNB SO MU ND COTTENCAIVETGWENN / ——o—o—— ■ i Sun. Mon. Tues.—Betty Grable, ? •'Meet Me After The Show” 1 ■ TWO ACTION-PACK I < _ ■ hwMW- STARRED g_ for W smiley ■ BURNETTE wteathe : rws amok ■ V Jr
Frosh-Soph Team To Play Here Tonight The Decatur freshman-sophomore football team will meet Huntington at 6:30 o’clock this evenin? at Worthman field. No admission will be charged and the public is invited to attend. . Wednesday evening, the freshmen defeated the seventh and eighth grade team, 1.3-12, after leading at the half, 7-6. t ing games next week, Warsaw will play Columbia City and Auburn ■/meets Garrett, The NEIC standing: W L T Auburn a— 4 0 0 Warsaw ?_ 4 0 0 Columbia City 2 11 Garrett 1 3 2 0 Bluffton „ —1 3 1 New Hdven -—4 14 0 Decatur 0 5 0 O_—, - : Seek Age Limit Cut For Prep Athletes Indianapolis,; \ Oct. 18. —(UP) — The athletic council of thp Indiana High school Athletic Association will act next Wednesday on a proposal to reduce the’ eligibility of prep students for athletics. A proposal submitted by the Northern Indiana Athletics Conference would reduce the eligibility from 20 to 19 years. The IHSAA also announced that l its board of coptrol decreed that I basketball floors for semi-final and final tourneys be expanbed I 'four feet in length—to 78 feet|JiVj s(4fWith four feet behind each basket instead of two. OPTIMISM (Coatinued FVn* Pare Owe) ,ist resistance suddenly collapsed west of Yonchon. Allied troops who had been attacking for two days against fierce enemy opposition spurted northward unopposed and captured four hills and several key f terrain features!” ■an Sth army Communique reported. The three UN divisions converging on Kumsong froip the southwest, and southeasr ran into stiffening Communist resistance Wednesday night. LIMBERLOST DRIVE-IN THEATER GENEVA \ Shows At 7:00 & 9:30 Except Sat. 4 Sun. at 6:00 &. 8:30 Xast Time Thursday OCT. 18 “THE TEXAS RANGERS” ■- \ and 1 ' • ' J “SNOW DOG” FRL-SAT. Oct 19-20 “HOT ROD” \ AND ROD CAMERON .. IN ' ■ ’’ ■' “OH, SUSANNA” Sun.-Mon. Oct 21-22 ABBOTT 4 COSTELLO Joan davis IN “HOLD THAT GHOST’ I AND j “THE CACTUS ROUND-UP” WITH ! \ < ANDREWS SISTERS FRI. SAT. & SUN. Continuous Sat. 4 Sun, . Only 14c-30c Inc. Tax ED FIRST RUN HITS! . ;\/ '■ \ Bl / II ■ I ’ wrli ilk a dneCOLOR V J JON HALL mimsoß |
Dodgers And Giants Lead All-Star Team New York, Oct. 18.—(UP)—The Giants and Dodgers set the pace on the United Press all-stat National league team announced today- landing seven out of the 10 positions to dominate matters just as they did during the pennant race. On the all-star team, however, Brooklyn came out tn front of ! the Giants with four players on , the list selected by 24 veteran baseball writers —three from each league city. The Giants placed ■ three players and the other spots > —all in the outfield —went to the i Phils, and Pirates. The Dodgers named were catcher i Roy Campanella | pitcher Preacher Roe, first, basoinan Gil Hodges, • and second baseman Jackie Robini son, Pitchdr Sal Maglie.V shortstop Alvin Dark, and third baseman Bobby Thomson were the Giant players named. The outfield berths went? to Stan (the man) Muaial of '(he Cardinals Ralph Kiner of the Pirates, and. Richie Ashphrn of the Phillies. Two players, the magnificent Musial and the . “ indestructible Campanella were unanimous choices, although Musial received some of hte votes at«; first base. Both were repeaters • from last year’s honor team along with .JTodxes and i Musial, who has won just about I ’every honor in the books, again .took the league batting champion(ship with a .355 average, the sanrs , big title he has taken five out of the last eight years, in addition he set the .pace on triples with 12 and smacked 33 homers. Ashburn I was a sharp standout In center, enjoying his best year with the Box Office Opens 6:30 ; - Last Time Tonight In Exciting Technicolor! “ROGUES OF SHERWOOD FOREST’ Jchn Derek, Diana Lynn —o ; FRI. & SAT. GRAND DOUBLE BILL! Ilifegd-Lm Stories of the West’s Most Desperate Outlaws! / Fxxnount presents fnWBMW BJUD •Urtme WENDELL COREY MACDONALD CAREY WARDBOND ELLEH DKw'bRUCE BENNETT mil Wil I —ADDED FUN— NtS SMOKV MOUMTAIH SOVS Mwl 1 < w? im ■anil scorn r 4 —lo—o, Sun.—“ Tarzan 4 The Amaxons” -0 Children Under 12 Free f
Criticism Mounts Os Indiana Coach Bloomington. Ind., Oct. TB.— (UP) —Snowballing criticism of Indiana’s soft-spoken grid coach, Clyde \Smith, mounted today with (he distribution of a mysterhius questionnaire asking “what’s wrong with our foot ball tdgin?” The mimeographed sheets appeared on campus yesterday. They were not signed, contained no return address, and school officials <iid.not know who wrote them. The questionnaire was a faßt sequel to outspoken criticism of Syiith \by a prominent Chicago alum’us. J. Franklin Lindsey,, ’ifpfmer president of the Chicago Hoosier alumni association, i(aid many Indiana backets felt Smith “can’t give us the coaching we’rt entitled to.” The campus circulars asked: ? "Do you think Indiana's schedul * is too tough? ‘ "Do you think a lack of manpower is responsible-for Indiana’s poor record? “DO you think inferior coachitik is at fault?" 1 ‘ Smith although he did not (mrisment directly on the questidm naires, said "as a coach I expect !to be criticized." “We have a yefang tea(n and have made a lot of mistakes," he liaid. , > Smith has led the Hoosiers sinqe 1948 and has a three-sea<oq reford of only six victories against 20 defeats. Indiana has lost two ' games by lopsided sqpres this iseason beating Pitt an'l 'faces rugged Ohio State Saturday. otherwise disappointing Phills. He batted .344, stole 29 bases. qtid' ( got the most hits, 621. and played' a whale of a game defensively. ; | Kiner, the home run king? for six straight 1 ■ years for a record, that . may stand in the National league books for some time, got 42' homers, batted in 109 runs and had a .309 batting mark. But just edged Giant star, Monte Irvin for the third berth winning by one vote. Irvin, hitting spark plug of the pennant darlings, led the league‘in runs batted in with ‘ 121. Hodgee, despite a late sehsnn' slump which helped to wreck the Dodgers, still was the 4 best at first base where he .fielded with siijier- , iority and hi( 40 homers, even though his average slumped to .268. Robinsoti, named on all InU, two ballots, never let up with the Dodgers and finished with a gaud), .338. Dark won ; the shortstop berth without difficulty from Peewee. Reese of Brooklyn. He his,! \.303. ’ ■ \ \ At third it was a battle between defensive star Billy Cox of Brooklyn and Giant hitting hero Bi>bby Thomson, who took over thd infield post at mid-season. It wak no coincidence that the club peninant drive started from that move. He ’ hit .294. batted in 100 runs and hit 32 homers. Campanella made it no contest behind the bat with his brilliant all around play., Hurt .often, be. shook , off his injuries and stayed in the lineup, finishing with 33 , homers, 108 runs batted in and a .325 batting mark. Roe, with the best wbn and Ibst mark ever compiled by a 20-game winner at 22-3, and Maglie, the clutch pitching ace of the Giants, ground up even in the voting for pitchers each named on all but five ballute. Reiterates Statement Agreements Worthless : Washington. \ Oct. 18.—(UP)—? President Truman said today he stands by his previous statement, that agreements with Russia ar£ not worth the paper they are written on. The president declined 10 discuss the exchange of'views bi* tween U. S. ambassador Alan G. Kirk and Soviet foreign minister Andrei Vishinsky. \ | NEW HOURS 7:00 A. M. to 12:00 MONDAY through SATURDAY I •
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
EiMUNG KOtfS
WOMEN’S LEAGUE Standings W' — $ W L Fairway —.... 13 5 Hayloft r ?_ J ._ 12 6 Rosie 12 6 Three Kings, 12 g Lumber Co. ? 11 7 Old Crown 11 7 Schafer 17 Bank .... 10 g Niblick __i 10 g Duo Therm J_. g 10 Kent- g 10 Preble __J |_4. 8 10 McMillen 8 io' Hill-Smith ... 7 n Car Dock Li 7 u Sutton 7 11 Hoagland Grocery i; 12 BPW ..J.,.. ___/ 117 High series: Schafer 546, Plasterer 505, Moran 5*02. High games: Mary Miller 224, Schafer 211-179,i Plasterer 210, Woodward 193, Musser 198, Hooper 182, Fabrote 181-171. M. Laurent 176, Wa> 176. Moran 175. HOUSE-SENATE (Cnnlinned From Paso One) by a fine or a jail term and beverage pelmit suspension. The authors were Reps. Norman J. Neely, R., Bloomington, and Charles T. Miser, Ft., Garrett, Another, by Joseph 11. Walls, R„ Bloomfield, would reqiiiu* trucks nioying along< highways, to stay at least 500 feet apart. The sugar beet industry of Europe got its stalrt during the Napoleonic Wars when sugarcane imports were cut off.
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TRUMAN (Contlnned From Purr One) federal judgeship. The chief executive, peppered hy questions designed to smoke out his 1952 V plans, "said he would disclose his decision' when it would be politically expedient to do so. He added that he would be the sole judge of the timing. \Then he supplied the nearest thing to g clue in discussing the possibility of a speaking trip, he could not make such a trip, he said, until he had announced what he planned, to do. As it now stands, the 1952 presl- j ~7MOOSE 1311 Regular FAMILY NIGHT FRIDAY SATURDAY round & Square DANCING I 2 Floor Shows
dential race is it contest between Taft and Mr. Truman—oi(e eager for the challenge and the other noncommittal. “/ A Although the president has not declared himself, from the standpoint bf political realities he might? as well be a candidate. . 1-4— . . I/. ? RUSSIA THROWS (Coatinued Front Face One) ko thal Russia proposed the truce talks be limitejl strictly tb military questions. i , , V \ . 1 j Trade in a Good Town 'r- Dfecatur
1 1 —— iiii.i.ii , j&SSI&b. V : ' wßlfi SPECIAL EJITERTMEJIT SATURDAY EVENING, 8:00 P.M. Round and Square Dance 9:00 P. M. ADAMS POST 43 American Legion —'— —
THTTRSDAY, OCTOBER IS. 1951
BRITISH TRUCK (Contiaued From Page One» the zone proclaimed a total state of emergency Until Sunday: j 4. Egyptian laborers began building a new rail bridge across the canal to connect its home forces with troops in Palestine. 5. The remaining members of \ Britain's 3,000 strong paratroop Ljigaie- weri arriving from Cyprus Jo swell thb British .garrison at thd Suez to more than 13,000. ■I : til . ' ;A ■ / j . j; ?. ■ . .? ?;. -/' Go to the church of your choice next Sunday. . / ■■■ — -
