Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 261, Decatur, Adams County, 5 November 1951 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

fSPORTSI

Commodores Launch Season j Tuesday Night The Decatur Commodores will launch their 1951-52 basketball .season Tuesday night, meeting the Pleasant Mills Spartans, at the Dfz catur public high school gyn). „ s While It will be the first'/tatt for the Commodores, the Spartaps had their fir«t taste of the n<»t £.ame Friday, defeating; Wren,. 38-31.. . . Coach. Dave Terveer has he eh facing a rebuilding job this season, having lost his entire starting five j of last 'year. Five lettermen froth last season’s sectional squad artel available. Louis Laurent, ,Fra;ht Coyne. Steve Gass. Joe Costello and Ed Wilder. The Commodores will, not play j home again until Nov. 28. when they entertAiir~ J.luntington Catholic agt i the DUS gym. However, the Cbirf-' jnodores will play at Monmouth FTI, , day.. i ■ .; J | The Adams Central Greyhounds will also'open their Reason Tuesday night, battling the Monmdutfi Eagles at Monmouth. It will be an ' Adams Central’home game. < , Four games are on the coiintjq schedule Friday niAht. Commodore| ! at Mcnmojuth, Alanis Central.’ a| Geneva,, Pleasant JSfills at Bern? and Jefferson at Bryant. /J, . The Decatur Yellow Jackets, who completed their football seasop Fri- 1 day, will wait until Nov. 23 to start ; their net campaign, meeting the 1 Geneva Cardinals* at < the ’ Decatur, 1 gym .. * . r fr ; i.gj I i . ' '. *'/• Three Deer Killed By Decatur Hunters Ar least three ; deer were killed by Decatur hunters Ln a three-day ’ rshooting holiday' in Southern Indi- i •Lua the past week. - . Nile Williamson of Bush street'Ishof a nine point. 280 pound buck, wiiieh dressed out at 230 pounds The buck was killed in the Morg-an-Monroe state 5 forest preserve. \ i Other members of ■ party were the Rev. Lawrence/ /Norris of Union Chapel, the Rev. * Robert Hammond of tlfe First Baptist church." and Rollie Crozier, all of this city. Sim Burk shot a 160 pound doewhile hunting with Marion MrKean of Monroe in the Harrison county forest, fnear Corydbn. ? Herman Hi” Meyer and Hep man Weber of this. city, shot IhH stantaneously at a dpe while hunt-’ i. ing in the Harrison county fordst and killed it. The dbe- weighed 129 pounds dressed. / Williamson shot his deer Friday and the other hunters bagged their prizes eariy Thursday morn* ; - ■ " . , ’ X? ■ > ? - The Indiana state conservation department estimates that 2.00 Q deer were killed in the two days. One hunter is credited with killing a 420-pound Jjuck. the largest animal killed in the state’s first deer hunting season in 58 , . /j — High School Football South Bend Washington 12. Fori . Wayne C. C. 6. s / Fort Wayne, Concordia 14. Hojwe / Military 6. - . , . , Culver Military 13, Goshen 7. South Bend Central 6. South Bend ? Riley 0. Call Democrat i Headquart* - ers, 3-4464 for transportation to and from Election Polls Tuesday. Attendant on duty all day. Plenty of cars. (t If You Have Anything To Sell Try A Democrat Want Ad—rlt Pays ■ .. ■ — • 1 —" wkW>»l ■ ■ J K Tonight & Tuesday In Gorgeous Technicolor! DENNIS MORGAN “PAINTING THE CLOUDS WITH SUNSHINE” Virginia Mayo, Gene Nelson -• ALSO—Shorts 14c-44c Inc. Tax j —o-o— Wed. & Thurs. —Robfj, Mitchum ,j "WHERE DANGER LIVES" ‘ First Show Werf. at 6:30 Continuous Thurs. from 1:30 ’’ BE SURE TO ATTEND! , 0-0 Coming Sun.—Premier Showing! J ‘‘The Tanks Are Coming” j

, 5 Week's Schedule : Os Adams County Basketball Teams , Tuesday Commodores\vs Pleasant Mills at D. H. S. "'Adams Central at 'Monmouth (Adams Central home Friday j Commodores at Monmouth. Adams Centra! at Geneva. • Pleasant Mills at Berne. Jefferson at Bryant. Pro Basketball , .. NBA Results Saturday Scores *|. Philadelpha 70, Fort Wayne 69, Indianapolis 90, Baltimore 86. Minneapolis 93. Rochester 74.’ -New York 68, Milwaukee 66. Sunday Scores i Fort Wayne 84, Nev.’ York 75. j Syracuse 98. Minneafpolis 67. I Boston 97, Indianapolis 65. - Decatur Druggist At Conference j Louis An Jacobs, of the’Holthouse Drug store is in -Rochester. N.Y to ! attend a retail photographic salesmen’s training conference spon- 1 sored by the Eastman Kodak com-1 pany. Twenty-sik men gnd women > from 14 states. Canada and Greece | comprise the group. J -The dealers will tour the com-1 panv’s Rochester plants and attend daily lectures designed to acquaint them With the latest Kodak products and services. Arning the topics to be covered are cameras and | accessories, color photography, films, papers and chemicals, planning store advertising, home movies. and basic selling principled. Next Saturday the group will i visit Niagara Falls where each 1 person will have an opportunity to, take black-and-white and color still and motion pictures. SURPRISE i (Continued From Page <»ne>. — J . - rr „ at mid-day. , , The communique said allied units had withdrawn from two ‘ key tierrain‘features” west of Yonchon fol- 1 lowing the enemy attack, but front, dispatches said UN units recaptured al! lost ground by last midnight (9 a.m. .Sunday CST). •; Three new light Comtnunist prob-1 ing attacks southwest of Yonchon repulsed. / On the eastern front, the Bth' army communique- said, UN forces pushed theiir deepest spearhead in North Korea still farther up, the coast. The afties gained 2,000 to 3.000 yards nbrthwest of Kansong and seized a hill south of Kosong, 46 mHes north of the 38th parallel. NO RELIEF <Condnucd From Pnae One> skidded on an fee-covered highway and smashed into a pole. Victor Emmanuel Nelson, 68, of Minneapolis, froze to death near Byiggs Lake, Minn., after he collapsed from exhaustion while tramping through deep He had Itried' to- leave his snowbound summer cabin on which he had been working. The early cold snap rsent Hpughton, Mich., off to a /lying start toward another rec.ord winter. Houghton, where it snowed for 52 consecutive days last; year for a total snow fall of 288 inches, already had 24 inches on the ground. Oldtiiners there said it was the most in years. BATTLE FOR. (Continued From Page One) general assembly Thursday on the day before an address by Soviet foreign minister Andrei Y. VishinA sky. will lay the American plan before the UN in the farm of concrete proposals. ,'b—The UN will be called upon tb bolster allied forces in Korea and do \lbiy apply stiffer economic sanctions against Red China, ac/oiuihg to predictions by two top U.S. state department officials in Washington. M - •’ For use of the Canal Zona, the ILS. pays the government of Pan- j ama $430, 000 annually. “Througn Service We Grow” HELLER Coal. Feed & Supply 722 W. Monroe St. Phone 3-2912

Cleveland And Chicago Bears. Hold Pro Lead New York, Nov. S.—(IUP)- — The Cleveland Browns, who won an unprecedented five straight professional football championships by making a minimum of mistakes, are turning opportunities into touchdowns at tremendous rate in their bid for six titles in as many sea-1 sons. > ■[ Cleveland turned four Chicago Cardinal fumbles and an intercepted pass into touchdowns or field ; goals yesterday to win, 34 to 17. | and remain first in the National league's American conference. , While the Browns again displayed the alertness that has brought them five straight victories since they lost their 1951 ojiener, the Chicago Bears kept first place in thV National Cowtererive with a 27 to 0 victory over the Washington Redskins. The Browns and Bears have identical 5-1 records., The New York Giants remained second to the Browns by defeating the New York Yanks. 37 to 3J;’and the Los Angeles Rams\ took undisputed second place behind the Bears with a 23 to lb decision over the San Francisco Forty-Niners. In other games, the Philadelphia Eagles beat the Pittsburgh Steelers. 34 tb 13, and the Detroit, Lions downed the Green Bay to 17/ 1 But in the rugged NFL where the talent is fairly evenly divided and where alertness often decides the'winner, Cleveland was most impressive as the/2 -teams reached the halfway marks In their Ingame schedules. ' Bill WiUIH. AleMAgase/Eillersoff Cole and captain Tony Adamle recovered Cardinal fumbles and Agase added a pass interception to give 19,742 shivering Chicago fans a sample of how the'Browns have pla.ved since losing their first game to San Francisco. The Bears also showed were geared for the November drive as they snapped Washington’s twogame winning streak before 31,737 fgns in the capital. George Blapda's

• ■ . \ ■ ... . . - Sming The People I Since IW7 I DECATUR INSURANCE AGENCY I ' ' ' ' : ' if ' ' j'. '. 1 Bfji KENNETH RUNYON, Owner |■ ■ • ' ■’ I' .■:* •; | \ I “All Forms of Good Insurance” I Be A Blood Donor November 9 anw ma ■ ■ Ba..a.:*'ata..aja.:a bbb wnm’ Now! Sensational New ■4WATERHOTTER' For users of B. XcbwainiygetX manufactured, | ® I manty of hot I natural, mixed, H or lP r i 7 FILM OF FLAME I fi? I NIVII * cloosi i famousno-cloo tow” You Pay SINGLE PORT • \ HIM ..FUME *‘4 NOTHING EXTRA! p.unud, Illustrated • • ■•••wwj ■ nwwm ®? I Mort hot water at lower cost than you may ever have dreamed possible —thanks to White’s many exclusive advantages. And WH AT a “pick-up"! “Pick-up", you \. know,la the speed with which cold water that comes into the tank to replace the hot water you \.. \ > u«e, « heated to the temperature you Ho# Wofar Spacfa&ft want. Wat er-H otters just can’t be Sbcu 1930' beat on “pick-up" or any other point! Come-see-be convinced! KLENK’S

two fjeld goals plus touchdowns Chuck Hunsinger. Don Kindi an& Jul|e RykoviCh gave the invaders more than enough points as ths Bear fine choked off the Redskit| attack. ; ■ COLLEGE Big Ten Teams -Wisconsin 6. Indiana 9. Illinois 7. Michigan 0. Ohio State 3, Northwestern | Minnesota 20, lowa 20 I tie). ' . Ihirrtue 28, Penn State 0. ?| State Teams Notre Dame 19, Navy O. | ; Valparaiso 33. Luther 7.' .‘F St. Joseph’s 39, Ball State 21. h I Hanover 14, Taylor 6. [' I Ev«psville 7, Eastern Kenkuck^, I*' 1 • I Western Michigan 20. Butler 0, Rose Poly 14. Cedarville (O.) 6/ I Wabash 35, University of the {South 7. Franklin 18, Earlham 6. Centre 9. Indiana Central 6. Midwest Drake 35. Great Lakes 20; Kansas 27. Mebraoka 7.\ Oklahoma 32, Kansas State 0. Detroit 7, Bradley 6. Tulsa 35, Oklahoma A & M 7. East Princeton 12. Brown 0. Dartmouth J. 4, Yale 10. , Maryland 35. Missouri 0: Southern California 28. Army 6. South Alabama 16. Georgia 14. Duke 14? Georgia Tech 14 (tie). Mississippi 6, v Ixinisiana 6 (tie). I 'George Washington 20. South'. Carolina State 14. Tennessee 27. North Carolina 0. I Kentucky 32. Miami (Fla.) 0. , Missippi State 10, Tulane 7. / Southwest Texas Christian 20. Baylor 7. t < Rice 21, Pittsburgh 13. Texas 20, Southern Methodist Arkansas 33. Texas A & M 21.*’ Far West UCLA 21, California 7t Stanford 21. Washington State J 3. Oregon State 40. Washington if. Call Democrat Headquarters, 3-4464 for transportation to and from Election Polls Tuesday. Attendant on duty all day. Plenty of cars. It

DFCATU* DIO.T tWMOCIRA-r, nfbtXKA.

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MAJOR LEAGUE Standings irk- w l pts Soya 19 g 25 Dry Cleaners 16 11 23 y&ttF’s .... 15 12 20 (•'Jem’s Hardwarel3 14 16 First State Bank 13 14 15 Adams Co. Linbr. 11 16 15 Reef 11 16 14 /oe’s Barber Shop 720 9 Wigh games: Reinking 215, B. Shultz 223. Richard 203, Tope 210, 1». Hofmau 211, Eichhorn 209, Way Az bell 205. RURAL LEAGUE It/. Standings w l Reynolds Insurance - 18 9 v ■

This Week Is | FAIRWAY WEEK r In Decatur What has been the feat accomplished at Fairway during their first year? We welcome you anytime from 7 a. m. to 12 ii?' midnite to see for yourself. mild, -M- wPI Restaurant etCATUI I N 0 I A N I Highways 27, 33, 224 .

in i . ' _■ J 1 • _ - ■ t — WE . i». - i ' ■ mW&? V-4 ■- ’ iRpaH HiSß■S' ‘/fl? I* ■■ ' ■ '■ Vote For I . ■liilm 11. Ihiiin -JEB™ I for MAYOR IMHH r r‘ ■ ■ ' > ■ '• • ■ , I‘ . ■.! " 1 You, the Voters, will be the judge in tomorrow's a .i' f -.. ■ 1 \ ' . > •-k ' v . Citv Election. ; I! r ■.' ■ 1 M . i \ i I ask you to compare the progress of the City of Decatur during these last three years and ten months with |’4 that of the five previous years. I then urge you to go to the »I'- i , ' ; g . \I • polls and vote for your choice). t If ■ ' ' J ' 1 I have tried to call on every voter in Decatur and f wish to thank you for your courtesies during the campaign. I3' < 1 Sincerely, / | I Ttl. I Pol. Advt. |HI | . v , i • , '• ■' ---■■: ■..•■■■■- • r; • :OZ AR K IK E I ■ ' ' LOOKS \| K.. OUT WEtL BE OUT r AN THIS WEEK, W BUT WILL YO' A C GOT A DATE WITH l IKEA DIFFERENT TEAM,) OF TH*RUNNING FOR ► DINAII.WE PLAY BUSTED HAND < A DOCTUH TMORRUH, I \ WITH OZARK 7 TH*PRO TITLE UNLESS TH VULTUfiESj >V BE WELL BY SO WELL SOON < COACH. AFTER \ I L WE WIN TH" REST OF . GAME- < ■f THREE LOSSES OUR WILD* = Y= k. OUR GAMES! j : /® ! till*>• *x'\> TIME, - f E&gg J E ■■ Il I Pl p nHAT

Shearers Mkt. =lB 9! Hoagland Hdwe 17 101 HeyerlysfX 16 11 Hayloft —-A416 11 Nine Mile Lmbr. 16 11 Old Crown 1 16 Eagles ,-.... 0 27 High games: Slmerman 210, Nahrwdfb 202, Enjleben-290, ;OsterE. Bgltemeief 221, G. Selkinw-200, ThienU 202, Miller 206. PRO FOOTBALL Cleveland 34, Chicago Cardinals PChicago Bears 27, Washington 0. New York Giants 37, York Yanks 31. Ixm Angeles 23, San Francisco 16. Philadelphia 34, Pittsburgh 13. ' Detroit 24, Green Bay 17. Forest fires blacken an area the size of Pennsylvania each year in the United States. t)

Jefferson Warriors Won Season Opener The Jefferson Warriors scored a . 69-20 victory oven Madison of Jay county Friday night in a game 1 played at Fort -Recovery, 0., accord- j ing to a belated report received to! day. The Jefferson second team also wbn, 20-19. . :—__——i, t ( all Democrat Headquarters, 3-4464 for transportation to and from Election Polls Tuesday. Attendant oil duty all day. Plenty of cars. 11

I “FOR, COMPLETE PROTECTION” BURKE INSURANCE SERVICE' Phone 3-3050 512 N. Third St. Decatur, Ind. ■ - —— DANCE Immediately After Commodore- Pleasant Mills Game | 8 TUESDAY, NOVEMDER 6th at the K. of C. Hall ' t Orchestra—Prizes —Refreshments To All Commodore I" KE E “BOOSTERS”

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1951

DR. J. L. KkiDEk Yf'nnflnued From I’nge Ihiei i Cornell University, receiving his. ; Ph.D. degree from Corneil in 1942. Dr. Krider will make his ).i» a<li quartern at. the executive offices of I McMillen Feed Mills in j Fort Wayne. , I Malaria is the world's most { prevalent disease, being responsible ' for up to 800,1000,1)00 cases annually, and out of wjiieh number approximately 3.000,000 deaths are reported. If You Have Anything To Sell Trv A Democrat Act —lt Pays.