Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 25 October 1951 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
I sports!
— TODAY — „» Continuous from I'3o “APPOINTMENT WITH DANGER* Alan Ladd, Phyllis Calvert ALSO—Shorts 14c-44c Inc. Tax BE SURE TO ATTEND! O—O FRI. & SAT. A WONDER-WORLD of Entertainment! •*. Come see its I / /. 7: ioondrous sights t and share ifk -XgZP - twu'JW, Disney’s I vtY /Alice I 7 in I WNOEBLAM) Wk Th* all-cartoon -a ’p. -Musical Wonderfilm f ? £ uen the ••AaiAuiisltH art ICWIS CAMOU’S two> rf/kfl S*l0»e« Story (hitrAutrt by " % * N*o totfio P<Ct«o. a ViZ?- J ' —o—o— .A Sun. Mon. Tues.—Bing Crosby in “Here Comes the Groom” FRI. SAT. & SUN. Continuous Sat. & Sun. DOUBLE DYNAMITE 2 BIG WESTERN HITS! Ror ROGERS TRIGGER* ■< smu b- <• j . rw3l Ifioe^y o^ 7 ] ?ENNY EDWARDS MMIWSw - GORDON JONES ■EfflHftgfcL/" J «K> JACK HOCT •or wniMc «ho THt 7 was .i #. fusfti um PADDED THRILLEROUTLAW jL MARAUDERS I - JL « wUlmtm ‘wlkK jEffix FTTc Wi Irr FUZZY KMOff Only 14c-30c Inc. Tax . New Masonry Saw* A portable masonry law that Is •aid to be dustless has been developed for cutting tile, brick and concrete block. i. M \ -7 Try A Democrat want Ao—it Pay*
' Monmouth's Net Schedule 1,. ' •■ - : : J Is Announced The basketball schedule frir the Monmouth -Eagles for the 1951-5$ season was announced today by i G. M.' Grabill. principal, and Char les Holt, coach. , ■ ( . • Seventeen games are on the Eagles’ schedule, which will open Friday night. Nov. 2, with the Hartford Gorillas playing at Monmouth, f Coach Holt fhces a rebuilding job this season, having lost six team members by graduation, including Bob Harvey, one of the county’s top scorers during, hiss high school I Career. Others who graduated last 1 spring from the county (championship team were Noryin Hultepieler, ‘ Donald Selking. Lloyd Kiess. Nor ‘ tnah Sheets, and Edward Stoppenhagen. \ <• 1 1 L ] The complete schedule follows: Nov. 2—Hartford at Monmouth. * Nov 6 A.dams Central at Monmouth (Adams Central home ( game). Noy. 9 - Decatur C(ftnmodores at , Monmouth. ' . Nev Ifi—Huntington/Catholic at ( Monmouth. ’ ( Noy. 28—Fort Wayne Central Cathoik- at Monmouth. Dee. 5- ? Rockcreek at Rockcreek. 1 . Dec. 7—Hoagland at Hoagland. Dec. 12—Petroleum at Bluffton., •’ Dec, 14—Pleasant Mills at Plea- ‘ sant Mills. • ~ Dee. 21—Jeftersori at Berne. . Jam 2—Geneva at Geneva. T 17 I ■ h i Box Office Opens 6:30 Last 4 Days of the Season! - Last Time Tonight - “BOY FROM INDIANA” Lon McCallister, Lois Butler & “RUSTY’S I , BIRTHDAY” Ted Donaldson, John Litel —o-*—-FRI. &.SAT. GIANT TWIN BILL! COKM with a .will CFFR -CHARLES DRAKE —ADDED LAUGHS— ' / \w. V A / W** \|\ tcKkl«» an UtfSW--IL'*U J\ h' w 9> r - > ' JH ~ ~L Sun. —First Decatur Shoydnfll "Her First Romance” With Margaret O’Brien —7-o—O 'Children Under 12 Free.
High School Football : Auburn 27, Garrett 13. Warsaw 19, Columbia City 6. Richmond 27. Fort Wayne Central 0. Marion 20. Wabash 13. Plymouth 25, Huntington 6. Logansport 20, Kokomo .7. Muncie Central 26, New Castle 14. Brazil 65, Dugger 6. \ Jan. 18--Lancaster. Central at Monmouth. Jan. 25—Hoagland at Monmouth. Feb. I—Berne1 —Berne at Berne. Feb. B—pleasant Mills at Monmouth. | eFb. 12—Adams Central at Monmouth. . [ Feb. 22 —Harlan at Monmouth. Q-- — 0 i Today's Sport Parade I | (Reg. U. S. Pat Off J | By Oscar Fraley - 1 0 —— * n New York, Oct. 25.—(UP) — There was every indication today that tempestuous ’Ted Williams’ days with the Boston Red Sox were uumbered-T-and in midget digits. The potential parting of the ways, long reported just over the horizon, loomed, up in the headlights when Lou Boudreau was named 1 manager of the Fenway Park mil-1 Ihipaires. Shuffle all the parts together and you have a speedy fare- j well. i Boudreau gave the tipoff when he said that he was certain owner Tom Yawkey would trade Williams “it he could get value for value.” | That establishes the fact that senti-i mental Torn wouldn’t stand In the! way of such a deal. Now move back to Boudreau, hisj plans and his feelings. Lou knows that the Red Sox cain’t win the Ainehcan league flag without a great shakeuj). Whether they have been foldup artists or merely false favorites, they have proved conclusively _that some changes must be made. Boudreau is a man who will not play a phlegmatic role. He is a driver toward victory and already h:is tossed out brjait sos 'a catcher, second baseman and righthanded pitching. J Williams, who could make /the turnstiles spin elsewhere, is quite a lure in that type of fishing. Add to that the fact that; while Boudreau and Williams aren*t enemies, they are far from bosom buddies. It was Boudreau, when he I was at Cleveland, who came up: with the “Boudreau shift”\ against Williams. Swinging the infield and oiitfield 4o the right side. Boudreau instituted a practice which clipped many points off tall Ted’s batting average during the last few yekrs. Williams is not the type to forget—or forgive— such,, a ruse against his hallowed hitting. Yet Boudreau isn’t a man with whom to get temperamental. He saw how it could wre/ck a ball Club in the days when, as an Indian, he played with Cleveland’s “cry babies.” And, when he became manager and won the pennant in 1948. he' was quick in 1949 to scorch the sliding Bob Feller for having too many outside activities. Williams has said that He will not play anywhere else. This statement is regarded with suspicion. The theory is that for the kind of I money he makes he’d play the Canarsie Cougars. : \ ' Yet that fabulous salary may be the rpajor stumbling block in peddling the pig man. There aren’t too many clubs who would be able to shoulder his $90,000 tab. of the $65.000 bill'if he was slashed the permitted 25 percent. L WOMEN’S LEAGUE Standings W L Fairway _._j 16 5 Three Kings 15 6 Rossie 14 7 Lumber Co. — 14 7 Hayloft- 13 8 Schafer _ r _.l3 8 Niblick r ____ 13 8 Old Crown r 11 10 Bank A,x— 10 11 Kent LlO 11 Preble 10 11 McMillen r — — 9 12 Hill-Smith -- 9 12 Dua Thermß IB Car Dock 4,_ 8 13 Sutton 7 14 Grocery *7 14 BPW 2 19 High series:. Trosin 545, Steele 510. - High games: Moran 192-1701, Trosin 190-189, Steele 187-180, Mar-
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DECATtJR DAILY' DtfMGCtLA't, DECATtTR, INDIANA
Belling Odds Favor Louis In Marciano Bout 11 J' ? ‘ 1 ’ 11 ?? New York, \ Oct. 25. (Up)- • Heavy support for Rocky Marciana dropped the betting pride another ijglf-point to 6-5 favoring Joe Louis as both principals rested before tpeir big fight tomorrow night. The continued robust backing for the unbeaten Brockton slugger provided a surprise because J exchampion 1 Louis had been inuc h more impressive in his last workout Tuesday than Marciano was yesterday. Bookmakers were laying to. 5 that bomber Joe beats stocky Marciano in their 1,0-rounder at Madison Square Garden, and they were taking 6% t,o 5. That left 6-5 ae the price for man-to-man wagering, ’ , . In knockout betting. 37-year-old Louis was more highly favcired over his 27-year-old opponent from : Massachusetts. Bookies were offering 13-5 that Louis does not belt out Rocky, ahd 4-1 that Marciano does not kayo Joe. . The brisk sale of tickets;, a*, prices ranging from $5 to $25. |j indicated a crowd of 17.Q00 and a gpte of $200,000. In» addition, pro* inoter Jiin Norris said televisionradio had been sold for $lB5-000, Louis will receive (45 percent of the net proceeds; Marciano only 15 percent. Rock}’ finished training yesterday at Greenwood Lake, ,N. Y., with two' rounds of sparring. He appeared strong and sharp as he. battered Jimmy Delange of New York about the ring with a hooding attack that was concentrated on the head'. However. Rocky, stopped two hard straight rights to the chin that shoOk him up. Louis was much more impressive in his last four rounds of sparring at pompton Lakes, N/J., on Tuesday when he floored one of his mates with a left hook, and twice stunned another: with rights; to the chin. ' Both will break camp tomorrowarid drive into New York for the (noori weigh-in at which the exchamp expects to f si(ale about 2)0 Marciano, about 185. j ■ ■ ' bach 186, Schafer 185, Gage 18L McClure 177-177, Mac Lean \ Way 175. Morningstar 174, FaiHofe( 173, Oettihg 173, L. Hobjis 171, Nash 171. y ( . ' - j , ■ \ / 7| ; Trade in a Good Town — 'Decajtiur; » FLORSHEIM M Shoes... .. for the new The new U-wing tip is sweeping the country, and Florsheipi has ! styled it in a broad variety of 7 leather and color combinations, either lace or slip-on styles.
jflL I fl ' I ! k HI ■ ' -! ■m i PIGGY ELLSWORTH, 24, "Miss . Michigan’’ of 1947, pretties up in i the women’s lockup) room in Chicago’s central police station after ( being seized in company of two , men police say are admitted drug addicts. She has been convicted twice on dope charges. She was found sitting between the two men In a car which was curbed for Im- j proper lights. (InternationalJ J INDICT (Continued From Pave One) /c’ourt for retrial, basically because of “the inadequacy” of the thal judge’s chqrge to the jury. I Trade tn a Good Town — Decatur FREE ENTERTAINMENT and -• DANCE I Saturday Eve. October 27th MEMBERS ONLY (7 ADAMS POST 43 I AMERICAN \ LEGION
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Hoosier Deer Hunterk To Hove Gome Dressed Indianapolis, Oct. 25.— (UP)-~ Hoosler deer hunters may hove their game dressed free of charge at seven checking points throughout the state during the three-day open season starting Nov. L the
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Indiana conservation department I said today.. , \ An official said “department employes will be glad to dress r deer for inexperienced hunters ’ who don’t wish to do so them- » selves.” Stations are located at Lynnr viile, the fire tower at Harrison’ j state forest near Corydon, north:
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1951
gate of Brown County etate park. ( main entrance of Morgan-Mptfroe state forest, .Brownstown, Scottsburg and Shoals. - '* 1 . Go to the church of your choice next Sunday. Trade In a Good Town —r Decatui
