Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 14, Decatur, Adams County, 17 January 1952 — Page 7
THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1552
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Pro Football Clubs Select Players Today New York, Jan. 17—(UP)—Seven ; T-formation quarterbacks were the ’ chief prizes as the National Football league began drafting college players today. ? «. I The seven are Babe Parilli of Kentucky, Hjarry Agganis of Bos- > ton University; Larry Isbell of Baylor, Bill Wadd of Vanderbilt, Ed Brown of San Franci&o, Don Klosterman of Loyola and Al Dorow of Michigan State. Agganis still has eligibility left at Boston, but actually he may be the biggest prize of all because he has completed his military service, As the draft started, seven teams : drew but of a hat for the right to I make first choice —the “bonus” choice. They were the New York Yanks, Lob Angeles Rams, San Francisco Forty-Niners, Cleveland Browns, Chicago Cardinals, Green Bay Packers and Pittsburgh Steelers. The others couldn't draw beer a. rise they had won the bonus pick in previous years. A survey of the teams’ greatest - needs. revealed that the Browns, Eagles, Redskins, Pickers and Lions will be searching for T quar- , terba'cks. The Yapks need linemen for both offense and defense. The Forty-Niners need line backers and defensive backs and the Bears need defensive linemen and backs. ’The Steelers’ “T” need is greatest because they are this year switching from the single wing to the T. The Browns want a man to spell Otto Graham and the Redskins want the same for Sammy Antihistamine and APC Compound for all-'round coldrelief. * _ ■ HMM Smith Drug Co.
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MM , Bought The Cardinals’ first choice would surely Ollie Matson of San Francisco. If still available, because' Matson’s old coach„ Koe Kuharich, takes over the club this season. The league’s rules committee met for -several hours; last night, .and the result seems to be this: the extra point will remain in pro foot: ball,' and the league probably will adopt a overtime i period for tie championship games, : League commissioner Bert Bell - proposed that thd extra point be - eliminated and each touchdown automatically be worth seven I points. Thfe rules committee voted ■ 7-5 in favor of this proposal, and this. Bell said, means It probably I will be defeated rirften the owners i vote, it takes, a- 10-2 margin the owners to carry the measure. I Ths vote was 9-3 overtime ■ period, and Bell thinks the extra vote can be collected. The league ■ also voted to nuitiber players according io their positions—but per- > mit the to keep the • numbers they noW use. The league revealed that a Dallas, Tex., promoter—who was hot | identified—tried to buy the New i York Yanks franchise from Ted i Collins. The offer was refused and Collins now has paid up all hislii ■ league debts. So he seems set for at least another season of pro foot 4 ball. i * l l • ,■ j College Basketball Kentucky Wesleyan 76, Evansi ville 74. Soledo 62, Wayhe 60. Dayton 90, Eastern Kentucky 73. Florida 74, Georgia 55. ' Pro Basketball NBA Standinot Eastern Division W X Pct. Syracuse , /22 12 .647! • Boston L2l H ~600 New York ’. L, 18 19 |,486 Philadelphia ij 15 19 .441 Baltimore 11 22 I 1333 Western DlvisloH J Minneapolis 24 12 .867 [ Rochester _.J. 23 12 A57 Indianapolis 19 16 .543 Fort Wayne 4_. 18 22 .389 Milwaukee 8 27 .229 Yesterday’s Results Minneapolis 108, Boston 94. it You Have anything To Sell Try 4 Democrat Want .Ad-—ft Pays
3ECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Week's Schedule Os Adams County Basketball Teams Thursday Hartford at Commodores: Fr,d *y Fort Wayne Central Catholic at Yellow Jackets. « LancAter Central at> Monmouth. Liberty Center at Pleasant Mills. Ossian at Berne. Adams Central' at Geneva (Adams Central home game), Klenk's Wins Way To tourney Semi-Finals Klenk’s of Decatur defeated (he Hoagland Hayloft team, 57-43, Wednesday night to join three other teams in the semi-finals of the invitational tourney which opened here this week, f Semi-finals will be played Monday night at the Lincoln school gym, with Capehart meeting GerbiSr’s of Bluffton at 7 o’clock, followed by Klenk’s and St. ;oe. The St. Joe team recently eliminated Klenk’s from the Zollner Pistons tourney, 61-60. Klenk’s and Hoagland were tied at the first quarter last night, 12-12, but Klenk’s held a 24-21 halftime lead and a 42-33 advantage at the third period. Ballard and Price led the scoring with 16 and 1!5 points, respectively, while F; Guenin topped Hoagland with 12 markers. ■ Klenk's FG FT TP Ballard 4 8 16 Reed 2 4 8 Berning T 3’4 10 . Crist ....4 2 2 6 Conrad 10 2 Price 5 5 15 Ramsey 0 0 0 Meyer .’. (TOO Totals x... 17 23 57 Hayloft FG' FT TP Grotrian 0' 0 0 Getting 3 2 8 Kiess 2 ’0 4 Bulteiheier j 2 3 7 Mailand 0 0 0 F. Guenin 6 0 12 Adams .1 2 0 4 Lepper 0 0 0 H. Guenin 1 4 6 Kaiser u 10 2 Totals —l7 i 9 43 ' — » G. Girls Ploy' *”• rt Game Here Tonight ' The <5. E. girls basketbail team will play the Hayloft girls at 8 o’clock tonight at the Decatur Comoddres gjrm. No athnission will be charged and the public is invited to attepd. The G. E. girls will play' the Haisley Oil Co. at Mferion Tuesday night. Stdn Musial's Ptty Raise Is Unfrozen Washington, Jan. 17.—(UUP)— Stan Musial's $35,000 pay raise was hhfrozen today in a new salary stabilization policy announced for baseball players. ; The government decided tkat the club's payroll—not the individual player’s salary—would be the measuring stick hereout. Thus, the St. Louis Cardinals can give Musial the raise to $85,000 as Tong as they stick to the dew formula. Card President Fred Saigh said it will take some study to see if he can fit it into the formula. Jackie Robinson of the Brooklyn Dbdgters and Monte frvin of the New York GlLnts are two other big league players poised to benefit iminbdiately. • CHARLES W. DAVIS of Illinois, nominated by President Truman tc be chief counsel of the Interna) Revenue bureau, succeeding is shown st his desk in Washington. Oliphant resigned in protest against his trtme being -brought into testimony in the tax /Zaterwrttoaab
TOPAAAATEORATHLHE - By Afan Mavar INN Efit. OF Ttftf • sf/ *" VAUI ~ -TH& f BSIa .. -M ■ Wfw • jJPaaM • -w<- * <s ? naw' •> ■’ 'iiß' • ‘ ' -OK '■ ■ "Irv f : iIHHu «■ jf F>. 'll ’ ! z-Vfyl Brow : DECATHLCH ■<: Jr ' C \\ SapffiWh ® c/MAfp with \ nnK . i •W; w FouaiU AW®U I WfW ] iWaiBU SCOR4ox J ’ A4 a vGtly - RE CORP, nOfftX 4 1 : P RE A a V .U/ff TiEO fl THREAT /V THAT \-XvF A>EConC> /rt THE • J VENT TOO — WjSp OLYMP/C POLE VAUL T.Y D>*ti ‘lnUi.i Lu K,».. * . »Tf-itSMfJ •
Two Men Fined On Speeding Charges, Robert Udell, 36, Indianapolis pleaded guilty to speeding in justice of peace court Wednesday night and was fined $1 and costs ginmouiiting to $11.75. William Leban'off, 22, Fort Wayne, also entered a guilty plea to a charge of speeding tn J.P. 1 court Wednesday night and dreW a like fine of $1 and cos:s totalling $11.75. | ( j Both motorists were clocked driving faster than 50 miles an hour in 30-mile zones. ’. Anderson Farmers Tomato Winners ' Lafayette, Ind.. Jan. 17 —(UP) — | t. A" TtkMey arid his Votf. Rfchanl, | R. R. 6, Anderson, were declared • winners today of the 1951 dotib’.e tonnage tomato contest comlncte'’. by Purdiie University. The Tooleys paid for their 1 Chacre farm with two years of torn.'’- 1 to crops. They produced 20.7 tons an acre on 14.8 acres of land last seasori, grossing $9,099 on the crop to add to sß,"rto grossed on their > 1946 tomato crop. Reserve winners were Edgar Mills and his son. Robert, R. R. 1, Springport.' They produced 20 ' tons an acre on a 10.02-acre field. The $5,000 and SI,OOO billshave also suffered a declihe.
rShH j ALL EGYPT is celebrating birth of ah heir to King Farouk and IT-year old Queen Narriman (shown on the royal yacht during their honey iriobn). The princeling, will be named Ahmed Fouad, after Farouk’s lati father, King Fouad. The playboy monarch married the commoner’. daughter last May 6. (Intematfonal, r
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; f i 1 * r“ Wfi' l-jrl ’t/ w $ Wftaroll * ' . ' wHi t ■ ! i ; . 1-i . -r _ _ ■■ i t , < QBjSWSSI I WMEMBiI i UKi .<!# ix-USSiSaI COMPOSER Ferde Grofe, one day divorced* poses with his new bride, the former Arma M. Lampton, at Las Vegas, Nev, Both the composer of “Grand Canyon Suite” and hii bride listed Boulder City, Colo.-, as home. (7« ter national;
New Grid Rule Is Adopted To Curb Slugging White Sulphur Springs, W. Va„ Jan. 17. —(UP) —A new football rule war put in the books today as a result of the slugging of Johmiy Bright, Drake University star who suffered a broken jaw in a game with Oklahoma A & M last season. The NCAA rules committee, at the windup of its annual three-day meeting here yesterday, passed unanimously a rule that would force a player to leave the game if found guilty of striking another player with the “forearm, elbow or locked hand.” \( Drake severed relations with Oklahoma A & M as a result of the Bright incident, and since then there has been, a clamor for Stricter penalties against Unnecessary roughness. The old penalty was 15 yards for striking a foe. The committee also placed a great deal of the blame on coaches and officials for “their failure to Observe and enforce the spirit of the rules?’ A resolution was passed urging coaches and officials to see that the rules are obeyed. The free-substitution rule was left unchanged from the 1951 version with one exception. A time out will be charged to a team sending in a player for the purpose of puntjng while the clock is funning. Before the penalty was five yards. Other major changes include: 1. A clipping is now “any blocking” from behind., 2. The defensive holding penalty is 15 yards instead of five. 3. The definition of a passer also Was clarified to give the ballthrower .more personal protection. The: old rule said the passe? was the man who threw the pass, but this year the passer will remain tUb , passer while the ball is in flight. He\also will be allowed to use-bis hands to ward oft wouldbe .tacklers. y 4.1 The fair/batch rule was revised to allow the player making the catch to move two steps to regain his balance. As a result of players giving phony fair catch signals last season, the committee rewrote the rule calling fcjr a 15yard to anyone simulating the one-arin wagging fair catch symbol. ' The practice of offensive teams getting the jump on the ball on illegal' shifts also Will be frowned on more during the 1952 season. The fiUes states that a team must coniem to a full stop for a full secbnd( after coming out of the huddle and lining up. The penalty was increased from five to 15 yards for infringement. . *- . -- __ I \ BOWLING SCORES • ! CLASSIC LEAGUE i Standings W L Pts. Burk Elevator 32 22 44 FairWay - 31 23 44 West End 31 23 42 Mansfield 29 25 ?6 Old (Crown 27 27 36 Wolff Hdwe. 24 27 32 Smith Ins. —i. 23 31 27 Cashblaiiea 16 35 23 High series: Reinking 641 (224-184-233); Raber 623 (215-214-194). High games: Zelt 228, Laurent 203-215, Schultz 202, Appehnan 225, Bußemeier 221, Mutchler 206, Hoffman 212, Crates 232. House 214, Gies 214, Miller 212. R. Hobbs 216- i 220, Meese 215, Hooper 25, Thtewilet 215. Ladd 200, Schroeder #32, Scheuinanri; 208. \ NOTICE OF IXSOiVKYCY Ih The Matter of the Estate of Della C. BowcVa Deceased IN THE ADAMS < IHCA'IT CO CRT 4«»2 \ \ ; ' Notice is hereby given that upoh petithrti filed in *aid court by Henry < B. Heller. adrtrfniMrator of maid estate, setting up the insufficiency of tije esAte of «aid decedent to pay the debts and thereof, the Judge of said Court did, on the 29 day ;of December 1951,* find said estate to >l>e probably insolvent, and order the same to be settled accord- s Ingly. The creditors of said estate are therefore hereby notified of insolvency, and required to file their claims against jsaid estate for allowance’on or before February X, 1»52. •" WITXFM the Clerk and seal of said Court, at Decatur, Indiana, this 31 drty;of Dec-ember 1951. SEAL . RDWAIU) F. JABEIIG, Clerk. JAN. 3—10—17 Ah oscillating bed with an elec--1 trcnlc. drive has been developed to further treatment cf infantile ' paralysis victims. ai. aaii igfiißfnra i J i 11
11 "■ 1 — ■■'MUI I*—l ! High SchMl BtoskttMl | Fort Wayne Central 56, Fort Wayne South 35. k f Gary Emerson 44,iGary Froebel 32. Lebanon 71, Lapel<42. Monticello 78, Rensselaer 64. Indianapolis Cathedral 61, Im dianapolis Shertridgd 53. Wabash. 60, Tiptop 48. : v [ -—-HH ? l City Bowling Meet Slated In February The annual Decatpr city bowling tournament will’be held next riwnth, with the teaip events Feb 2 and 3 and the doubles and singles 9. and 10.,f This year’s event Will be heldj at the Mies Recreation, Oran L.| Schultz, city secretary#, has announced. Oscar Lankenau, | president of the Decatur bowlini association, urges local association bowlers to enter the and regain laurels lost last year to Berne, when bowlers from jthat city won the team event and? also the doubles. Early entry < is urged on bowlers to obtain choice of time. DECATUR Conservation Club . Regular Meeting . Saturday, Jan. 19 7:30 P. W. Red Men’s Hall Speakent Refreshments :. , r , Entertainnjent ? j ■■ • I BS-1 -V’’. -wj *'> ff-‘ T? O .. — — 1-'— Hi H ' 'Bl /JR Auiomattedny oalFel Pow-R-Ventgets rid of heat, lint and moittorel Froduc* of BENDIX HOME APPLIANCES Dwition, AVCO Montrimtormf Cor>. STUCKY a co. \ Open Evenings FJxeept Wednesday MONROE, INDIANA < > ■ I 1 ’ Os HF- * ■ 4 z ■ i r “
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