Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 251, Decatur, Adams County, 24 October 1951 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Yellow Jackets Lose To Hartford City
Airedales Win On Wet Field Tuesday Night While wringing out the water and scraping off the mud of, the team’s suits, coaches Bob Worthman and Deane Dorwin will have much to consider about Tuesday's 26-0 defeat at the hands of'a hardcharging Hartford City team. For strangely- enough, Hartford City ran up the score on a small lake last night on notably long runs. Only one of the four touchdowns came within the 10-ynrd marker; the others ranged from 55 yards out. . The puddles that once waa, the Airedales' field didn’t seem to hamper a quartet of Hartford City backs on,jthe. long pull; for the most part, however, they were unable to do anything so Startling pther times. * , For the Jackets’, defence held up moderately well < the fifrst half in the rain-swept contest. And Decatur’s offense rolled down the field in the first stanza to about the Hartford 18 before sputtering out. < . / After playing out a scoreless first quarter, late in the half Hart ; ford City scored its first touchdown on a nine \ yard gallop liy Airedale fullback Dodds, which climaxed a 36-yard march. Hartford City had taken a Gene Vetter punt on ,the Decatur 35 and.in five ] plays had their score. plunge for the point was ’ good, and the half score stood J-0. Fullback Dodds, who stood out , all evening with his headsrUp running. raced midway in ths third period for 44 yards and the second touchdown, slipping through his own left tackle and eluding the Jacket team in hie jaunt, j Late in the third quart®? and starting the fourth, the Airedales chalked up their final Rallies, once whan substitute back intercepted a Morrison paf*s and raced 45 yards to seotfe and went untouched to the while, reversing his field twice Mn the way. . ' Lineupe ..if Decatur City, LE Kohne - JBiirgess LT Grote , lAeesorr LG Conrad jqpghtle C Thomas , %oaney RG Roop Jflrown bRT Knittie J'Jones RE Vetter , *Akers QB Morrison LH Blackburn fenber RH N. Pollock FB R. Pollock -DoddS] Score by quarters: j Hartford City 0,7 Scoring: Hartford City. y-touch-downs: Dodds (2), Tucker., Cadbury. Point after. touchdown: ■\ Gadbury, Dodda (plunges), Substitutions: Hartford « City: Davis, Rady. Morrical. String. Hos stetter. Schwaner. Winder .HeroTonight & Thursday •E < —( .11 OUR BIG DAYS! •yj First Show Tonight 6:30 | \i 'Continuous Thur, from 1:30 | BE SURE TO ATTEND! j v t~“ LADD S A FIGHTING AGENT | OF THE U.S. HAILS ULgI'A CRIME-nGHTING SERVICE! WH •' 1111 starring ’ WLIWSMI huh sinwii-mraiiNG-m m ALSO—Shorts’ 14c-44c Inc. Tax —o Fri. A Sat.—Walt “ALICE IN WONDERLAND” O— O Sun. Mon, Tues.—Bing Cnosby in “Here Comes the Gjrcom”
High School Football New Hayed 26, Bluffton 6. Plainfield 14, Martinsville 0. y \ Elwood 13,i Peru 7. ? - Bedford 7. Seymour 0. Shelbyville; 51, Greensburg 7. , Crawfordsville 39, Greencastle 12. Anderson 3.3, Royerton 2. baugh, \ Loing, Pouson. Heiser, Parks, Tucker. Decaturr-Lawson, Callow, Kiser, Schrock, Sc-hieferstein. Kolter, ’ Gray, Lobsiger, Vizard, Wolfe, r t Helm. H. Schafer, D. Schafer. Cus--1 ter, Brolqaprf Rowley.. OfficififeV-Fisher, Murry, Farris, Jones. V • I Fort Wdyne North Is Sectional Winner i Fort Wayne North Side won the sectional cross country meet Tuesday afternoon, held at Franke i park in Fort Wayne. Bi 1 'Griswold, of North, was the individual i winner, finishing first in 1u:3d,3. Nonh. finished first wtih 35 points, followed by Fort Wayne South with 50. Decatur, with 188 points, finished eighth in 'ilje field of nine schools. Both North Side and South side will' compete in the state final run at Indihnapolis Nov. 3. ■ >5. ■ | j ' 4 260 PATIENTS (Continued From Pn<e One) by relatives. . Fire Chief C N. Pepn said the blaze caused,’about $125,000 damage before it' was extinguished at 1:57 a. m. Ose patient.' a 75-year-old woman critically ill with cancel, was the only sick person not removed from the hospital. She was carried on a stretcher to a ground flobr office. There a priest administered final riles of the Catho-1 lie church while firemen rushed hose and‘other equipment through the office. , . ■ n ; 1 Some species ‘of palm trees attain a height of 150 feet or more. DMalurZ/TOg H Box: Office Opens 6:30 ‘ r Hi ■ . ' . ' 'W? ~ Last 5 Days of the Season! Tonight & Thursday 2 SMASH FEATURES! THRILLING in its Drama! JOYOUS with Love, Life and Laughter! teAfrv* V. Ml ' X” W>eueA ncnjtts COW. LON MCCALLISTER »d LOIS SUTLER |k.. » j —ADDED HIT—WHEN TWO EH-EEtS NEED I F w l ' b ,ESAMEMG f iL Fl - I knows how to moke them A :both happy! I i ted Donaldson g , 4io HN LITEL S -—o—o Fri. & SaiV ‘U- “Comanche Territory” & Bowery Boys Hit! - I—L_o—O Sun. —First Decatur Showing! “Her First Romance” With Margaret D’Brien ~T°— O Children Under 12 Free I' s -
MAKING PITCH | FOR TITLE -By Alan Mover JOHNNY WiSCONS/N QdARrsPBACK. AIAK/N& A 1 P/rcH ro \ PerA/N h/s ' 0/G TEN 111 ’ MF . O'ssi/Z 1- ■ I ■ zgfiM Obth y] mmmm rc’VP/i'’- ton V/s‘S W >. t COAIPLEr/ON ARK-op 1J ’WHSaP’* TAECOtWRy'G OEG-T— RE’<3 O:w---J BSEH MAK/M5 GOOO OH i&WjFF-- > ABOUT THE GAME PERCFHF I V T///GGEAGOH,FOOP r ■ 4— \ nutrib«>tr<« few Kwa rrturf V . . \ r te
Iq- ,■ 1 4 " —-i H) | Today's Sport Parade ( (Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.) I By Oscar Fraley j » • o__ 0 New York. Oct. 24 — (UP) — Spinning like a bargain Ga'kement revolving door after last week’s upsets byt still at the sanite battered old stand- Fraley's Follies and the weekend football “winners" along with some other grid “dope." ■ n' \ r i ■ j : Game of the Week ‘Princeton over Cornell t the Torrid Tigers have more than just D!ck\ !<azmaier. but he’s the; counterbalance. " , ! T-Viewing Wisconsin over Northwestern — cutting down the undefeateds. Dartmouth over Harvard — the Crimson (urns blue again. The Blueplate Special Yale over Colgate-like always. It’s you 1 !’ money. . i - | The EastPehn over Navy -quitchet kickin.j x k - Columbia over Army —how gonna beat Centra’s J. R. Weaver? Fordham over Syracuse — he kicked 5.3 put of 53 extra points. The Mid-West Notice Dame over Purdue—Yale odee won 47 ip a row’. p ■Michigan State over Pitt—-that’s without a tie. - i Michigan over Minne-ota and an all;time record. Ohio State over lowa —proving how times change. !■' ■ Also: Illinois over Indiana. Oklahoma over Colorado, Tulsa over Wichita. Oklahoma Aggies over Detroit. > lowa State over Drake. Katisas over Kansas State, Nebraska over Missouri, Marquette over Miami. 0.. and Cincinnati over Texas Western. The West U.S.C. over T.C.U. -so yoiir alma mammy was clobbered. California over Oregon State-, pity pore Haverford in 1900. Washington State pverOregon — Dickinson murdered 'em. 227-0. Wyoming over Utah —a miss that really was a mile. Also! Denver over Brigham
BELLMONT FARMS PUBLIC AUCTION 61— CANADIAN HOLSTEINS—6I \ ? ' 2 miles East of Decatur, Ind. / 2 mile North of Road No. 224. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1951: 12:30 P. M. (C.S.T.) \ 24 Registered First Calf Heifers, 14 are Fresh, Balance will be fresh November and December. Several heifer calves will sell separately. 8 Grade first calf heifers, Fresh, calves by side. ' 8 Registered Bred heifers. (5 Bred to Curtiss Candy Bulls). >* ■ 1 Registered Bull 2 yrs. old. 3 nearest Dam's average 20.662 milk 830 B. F. ' i? 3 Bulls 13 mo. old. Pure Bred (Not Registered.) 1 June ’Bull, Eligible. 1 May Bull, (Grade.) ' ; “Calfhood Vaccinated. T. B. and Bangs Tested." Outstanding quality. Selected from high producin'; herds of Cdn&da calves, sired by Canadian Breeding unit Bulls. Inspection invited any time before sale. ' TERMS' —CASH. (Not Responsible for Accidents.) j “WRITE FOR SALE FOLDER.’ 4 C. E. BELL and M. O. STOUTENBERRY, Owners Roy S. Johnson —Auctioneer \ Neri C. Johnson —Auctioneer 1 »"• Melvin Liechty—Auctioneer . IK Bryce Daniels —Clerk 24 30
DECATUR DAILY &EMGCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
. - AMERICAN LEGION LEAGUE i Ashbauchers won three fr<mi Gunners; Burkes Standard won three from Bplterneiets; Destroyers won two from Non Coing; Tankets won two from Macklins. > Standings W L £ts. Burkes 14 7 §>!» Destroyers.l4 7 Non Coms ----- 13 8 Bultemelers -1 12 9 Ashbauchers 12 ft Tankeis.—2fl 12 Macklins 6 16 J-6 Gunners 5 16 g 5 High games: M. Mies Andrews 202-218; H. Strickler 2|5; W. S.chnepf 211; P. Hodle '2ll ;|B. Bieberich 210; C. Stevens 206. 1 11 11 ! '.' '■>''o Young and Loyola over San State. The South Georgia Tech over Vanderbilt—ever hear of Leo Schlick? Maryland over LSl’—he h<Os i the one-game scoring record, g. J Georgia over Boston 160 points- on 12 TD's and PaT's. , » Kentucky over Florida — nynjst Lave beena icity Schlick. ■'< The Southwest ? Texas over Rice—there are supposed to be many 9.7 backs. Baylor over Santa Clara :(he clocked record is 11.2 seconds.;?? Vi tainova ovqr Houston set by Bill Steele in 1942. Texas Tech over -Arizona—get on It. you college tub thumpers? ; -- , - g ;-- SHOOTING ' ; (Continued From Pane garrison threatened to take severe nieasurtk if the governor did |iqf issue tile order, j -7? Deer Rifle Shooting Match : y Pleasant Mills Ranj?e Sunday, October 28 W *
Casey Stengel i Is American’s I Manager Os Year, New York. Oct. 24.— (UP)—| Clowning old Casey Stengel, who is about as funny as a small pox epidemic to rival ball clubs, was named American league manager of the year tooay by the LTnited Press upon comtpletloh of his third straight world championship campaign with the New York Yankees. Stengel, who toutfoxed his rivals ■with a lineup that contained only one .300 hitter] became the only manager in the history of the majors to win, three pennants and -three world series in his first three years with a club. He won by a comfortable margin over two other standouts, rookie pilot Paul Richards of the Chicago White Sox and Jimmy Dykes of the Philadelphia Athletics, in the balloting by a board of 24 veteran baseball writers —three from each league city. As usual, his Yankees were not’ the pre-season pennant favorites, and as usual Stengel had to combat some knotty problems to get the club into contention after a stuttering start. But the gravel voiced old manipulator, who has become baseball’s “good humar man,” kept shuffling his lineup with a daily Wi sec rack, j and found a winning cbmbipation in the stretch. 'ln the final Greeks of! the campaign—when both Cleveland and Boston were in a better strategic position to finish on top— Stengel knocked but ooth clubs in hindrto-hand combat, (Cleveland came to New York a game in front oh Sept. 16 and Stengel’s scrappeits trimmed the Indians tfvice in a row to, go in front for good. Four days later the Yankees to Boston, where| they had lost eight in a row in earlier trips. Now, when it counted. they wton two out of three, then came home to clinch the pennant . the following weekend by drubbing Boston id a doubleheader. Allie Reynolds pitched a no-hitter in the opener. . ) i ' \ The Yankees wound up by winning five straight from the deflated Red Sox. Stengel, who once aspired to be a ;|eft handed dentist back in his home town of Kansas City, had only a succession of second division clubs wllien he mafiaged in the National league. But given some first rate talent to work with when he came to the Yankees as a surprise choice for manager in 1949. he turned the American league race into an annual game of monopoly. v y Most of the Sahara Desert is part of French West Africa. , : i 28 Are Initiated Into Moose Lodge Tw’enty-eight \n e w A members were initiated into the Ix>yal Ondet of the Moose, in ritualistic work conducted by the Hartford City Moose degree team Tuesday. Fourteen other members, scheduled to be inducted Tuesday, will be initialed at a meeting six week« from last night, according to lodge secretary Ernest Worthman. \ The Decatur degree team, in an exchange] will conduct initiation ceremonies in Hartford City the last Wednesday in November, according tp the secretary. Motorist Is Fined On Traffic Counts Fred Tonnellier, of Fort Wayne, today was fined a total of $31.50 by justice ot the peace Floyd Hunter when he pleaded guilty in court to the charges of leaving the scene of an accident and reckless driving. Tonnellier, according to the investigation report of city police, was arresped Tuesday after an accident whiOh occurred Monday when his vehicle made a sweeping turn off Cort onto Second and struck the parked car owned by Glen Goldsberry. 120 South Tenth street. Damage to the latter car was estimated at $35. ■ ' I J? ” 1 ' Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
Hour LATE AV THE LAST PEA/OfiJ ' ((SOS-#) AHLESS* j' ' WARM UP, GSSE. / th' Li rt/m ~/TX 1 I ■ V?® : M I ■ WHUTFER?.?! \ 1 \\ L GOOSE , < w\ SI L CkL pIMPLCSf ’ ■. LI ' L'! ; 'LL "\ ■
M;MMn■Ofl -j r ■ 1 ’ " -it k ■qcCV d • mRK , / M y > MMk« AS THE BODY of her five-month-old son, Allen, Iles under a towel In the , K foreground, Mrs. Melvina Pendleton, 20, sobs hysterically in her Los Angeles home. The boy drowned in bathinette when she left him for a moment. Mrs. Pendleton (inset) plays'Alien’s music box. (International)
- 4 I ■■■ . ■ —A .-0- .. _' ' - ' — - RFC CONTACTS (('•Bttnued From! Paicr <>•»*» : questioned behind closed doors yesterday* by Francis D. I Flanagan of the investigating group. Flanagan said his staff has several “loose ends” to look into before reporting to Hoey on the “prelimlndry inquiry." He said, he hoped to give Hoey an informal report within a few days, but would not say whether he planned to question more persons before reporting. Mrs. Bratten said after the questioning thfCt "I never received any fee of any kind in all my public life.”
\ Vi ml gH jdH w JU JM THE THREE LAMBERT brothers of Ironton, O;, look happy as they hug each other in Korea, their first reunion in 17 months. All in the Army, they are (from left) Sgt. Robert V., 25; Sgt. Richard E„ 20; Fred A., ] JMP staff nhntno’ranhm- Dava Cicem. /International Soundt>hotn> ‘
• < I Smoother ■■ ■ n Dryer wk SB ■ M * ■. ■i i / ■ -■ _ i.' ■■ ■ ....;,<-dJ x-d ..- d <.i "1 T | ■ I ° I I p I MORE I B I PER ZIP I E I SIP • ■ \ M* ■ I R | . . ■ ■_ ;
V J. Mrs. Bratten said Barkley told her by telephone yesterday that “he thought I knew that we were not supposed to make such calls (as those on the RFC).” Although she denied emphatically receiving any fees, Mrs. Bratten said ihe often has received small gifts, such as candy and fruit, from people she tried to help. j ' Mrs. Bratten said she contacted the RFC frequently but.never urged it to make loansr She simply "made inquiries/’ she said. Prussic acid is obtained from a bitter type of almond nut. fry A Democrat want AO —it Pav*
WEDNESDAY,. OCTOBER 24, 1951
Drive A Better USEB m SEE THESE! . ■ ■ " ’’ 1 1951 Studebaker V-« Commander 4-dr. New $1995.00 1951 Studebaker Champion 2-dr. Slightly used.. $1695.00 1950 Ford 8 2 dr. Very nice $1395.00 1950 Studebaker Champion 4-dr. Loaded with accessories - $1475.00 1950 Studebaker Champion 2-dr. Overdrive and /\ heater _i- z----- $1395.00 1950 Chevrolet Styline Del. ,4-dr. Really nice.... $1395.00 1949 Ford Ctf?tom 8 4-dr. Radio & Heater. Overdrive $1245.00 1949 Ford Custom 8 2-dr. R. & H. Overdrive $1195.00 1949 Studebaker Commander 4-dr. Like new. $1295.00 1949 Studebaker Champion 2-dr. Very c’lean $1195.00 1948 Chevrolet Fleetline 2-dr. Nice $1095.00 1947 Plymouth Special Deluxe R. & H. Very clean 5950.00 1947 Oldsmobile 78 4-dr. R. & H. Hydramatic $1045.00 1939 Chevrolet 2-dr. Very * solid. Runs g00d.5225.00 1937 Chevrolet 2-dr. 4 new tires and runs good $125.00 ' ■ ■ / ' ■ These are all nice and liberal trade-in allowances can be given. See us today for your next used car. M& W ‘ • v • . V AUTO SALES Decatur’s Newest ' \ ■ ■■■ y I Used Car Lot G. Morningstar & H. Wulliman Owners. Decatur, Ind.
