Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 171, Decatur, Adams County, 21 July 1952 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
jr Wlw K I
Klenk's Downs East End Team ,'i { In League Till ,'r Decatur Klenk’si held on to their |tw<Fgame lead in the Federation league Sunday afternoon, defeat- \ ing the Fort Wayne East End Mer- , ‘.chants, 5-3, at Worthman field in this city. Klenk’s scored all the tuns needed for victory Jjy tallying \ four times in the first inning. Patnoude opened, the game with a walk, advanced to second on Helm's sacrifice and stole third. jCrist walked and Patnoude scored as Hoehammer grounded out. Reed single. Andrews walked and Miller — blasted a triple to account for ■ three more runs. Decatitr picked up an insurance run in the sixth on an error and a single hy Miller. ■. The Merchants scored all their runs in the sevebth*on two walks, an error and a double by EllenIn other league games Sunday, "McComb the Orioles, 5-2, and Monroeville whipped Butler, 9-3.. v ]• ' - \ Klenk’s will play Rdckford, 0.. at Worthman field Tuesday night at 8 o’clock in an exhibition game. The Rockford team, undefeated for the season, is rated one of the best in its class in this area. Klenk’s ; AB R H E ? Patnoude, .If 2 10 0 Helm, lb , 4 0.10 Crist, ss .' 2 1 0 0 Hoehammer, rs 4 0 1 O’ Reed, 3b I, 4 11 (j Andrews, c .it?.... 3 2 0 (J Miller. 2b 4 0 2 1 Plumley, cf 3 0 0 0 Bowen, cf 1 0 1 0 Bright, p 4 0 0 0 Totals 31 5 6 1 Merchants \ AB R H E Wilson, 2b 3 1 0 (f Clark, cf 5 0 0\ 0 Ellenberger, ss, 3b .... 3 0 10 Skoje, If 4 0 0 0 Hoover, 3b 2 0 0 0 Kennedy, ss 2 0 0 1 Koomjohn, lb ~.. 3 0 0 0 Parrish, rs 4 *0 2 0 Elliott, c 3 10 0 Meyers, p 4 1 2 0 l'\ ' ■' v; —i Totals ,33 3 \5 1 Score by innings: ■ Klenk’s ...'. 400 001 000—5! East End 000 000 300 —-3 The frankincense and, myrrh of the Bible came from the hill country of Dhofar, a part bf the Oman > sultanate which lies between the! Arabian Sea and the Great Arabian Desert. - J Trade in a Good Town —Decatur!
V' “It’s Codl In the' Country’’ Box Office Opens 7:15 | Tonight & Tuesday * JaneFbwell Ricardo k f LOUIS CALHERN-ANN HARDING With DEBBIE REYNOLDS Singing “Abbadabba Honeymoon” Funny Man Carleton Carpenter O—O—— Wed. & Thurs—John Wayne “Flying Leathernecks" —Color —o Sundays—First Decatur Showing “Cave of the Outlaws” —Color , j o—O > Children Under 12 Free
Harrison Maitlen Horseshoe Champ - Harrison Maitlen, of Salem, became Adams countyfs horseshoe charppion Saturday night by defeating G. Knittie, df Union, last year’s champ,; in the finals by scores of 50-13 and 51-14. \; j J Maitlen entered the finals?*by defeating A. Campbell, Geneva, soil and 50-12. > while 6. Knittie downed C. Chrisfonet, Monroe, 508 and 52-6. | I | ' Jim Johnson; of Monroe, won the Class B championship by defeating B of Geneva, in the finals by. scored of 50-16, 135-50 and 50-16. : Johnson gained the- finals by defeating L. Bailey, of Pleasant Mills, 52-43 and 52-21, and Shepherd entered the finals ’by! downing P. .Gould, of Bieriie, 30-$2, 53-38 and 50-36. League Matches Iri lealgue matches last week, Preble forfeited nine games to Monroe, Geneva? defeated Union. 6-3, Pleasant Mills edged Berne. 5-4, and Monroe defeated McMillen, 15-4, in a previously postponed match. ' I ; - Thursday’s . schedule: McMillen at Pleasant Mills, Berne at Mom toe, Preble at Union; and Geneva ht Salem. !■ ' | ? Standings ‘ W L Pct. GB Salem —-Ji-. 66 21 433 Monroe 641 2<j .ill 2 Union C 54 36 .600 12 Geneva 48 33 J»3 12% McMillen 45 46 ,600 21 Preble 33 4g .408 28 & Berne 21 69 .233 45 Pit Mills 4- 20 70\ .222 46 New Experiment On Anti-Polio Serum 3 II '\l * Iron Lungs Rushed To Sioux City, la. SIOUX CITY, Iowa) bp — Urgently needed iron. lungs were rushed here today as .thousands of anxious parents awaited , the start Os a mass experiment w’ith an untried anti-polio serum. More than 16,000 children between the of one and 11 will start receiving inoculations today in the Second test of its kind this year. J J' Half the children will be inoculated with gamma globulin serum. The rest will receive an injection of a harmless gelatin substance. None of thd children, of the parents, will know whether they have been. inoculated with the serum or the harmless gelatin solution. The type of inoculation; will be kept secret uhtil doctors publish their conclusions on the test. , Medical experts know 'that gamma globulin J will not> prevent polio. However, foey are trying to determine if the serum will take the paralysis out of the crippling disease. \ \ ■ Two iron lungs were rushed here hy arrpy plane from Duluth, Sunday night as the city recorded its 13th death during the current epidemic of polio? Connie Demers, 9, died of bulbar • polio in a Sioux City hospital despite the frantic efforts of doctors to save her. She was stricken with the disease last Thursday? Overloaded hospital staffs treated a total of 132 active cases of polio. Specially trained nurses and physical therapists were flown here from cities across the nation to help weary medical men and their aides. New ideas to enable enterly people to stay at work are being worked out by the British ministry of labor. Part bf the coal face in one colliery has been set aside for elderly miners. Democrat Want Ads Bring Results
AIR CONDITIONED Tonight & Tuesday In Exciting Technicolor! ALAN LADD . j J LIZABETH SCOTT “RED MOUNTAIN” Arthur Kennedy? John Ireland ALSO—Shorts 14c-50c'' Inc. Tax -O Wed. A. Thurs.—“ The Big Trees" Kirk Douglas—ln\ Technicolor First Show Wed. at 6:30 Continuous Thurs. from 1:30 BE SURE TO ATTEND! —o ■• j . ' ’’ . ; ■ I‘A Coming Sun.—“ She’s Wording Her Way Thru College"—Color
BACK IN STRIDE - - - By Alan Mover (W 1 H hr packer SHOULD > fj' l y BF ABLE I*/ to cod- Tj GENERATE \\ i fl ONRETA/N/NG \l V , I -Jj v - / I /dM BATT/NO \ ( > 7 I > * \ .. - x DURfNG Nss-- ‘V «■ TEE h'ALF ‘ 7 reason I \ - -•• j —x'\ J -J— HAVE X AMPEREP | I f N'N, EUr /R /?$' HE CAME OR ra \ W/ri AFTER OE//U5 TiLL TEE TRAD/RG A PASSER RE RUer RAVE SPENTA QVERAMONTR' LOT OF T//AE WORPER/AIG NREN TT TO START RACF/RG-A/SRAPEP/GUPEP MORE REAIS 7RANA PRESIDENTIAL ROPEEUL
MIWH AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W L Pct. G.B. Kansas City 63 33 .656 Milwaukee 58 36 .617 4 St. Paul 48 48 .500 15 Minneapolis 47 50 .485 16Vi Louisville 47 50 f 485 16% Indianapolis 46 51 .474 17% Columbus 41 57 .418 23 Charleston 35 60 .368 >27% YESTERDAY’S RESULTS Milwaukee 3-2, Indianapolis |2-6s St. Paul 3-5, Columbus 0-10. j Minneapolis 14-5, Charleston 2-6. Kansas City 2, Louisville 1. Indians, Cubs Meet In Hall Os Fame Game COOPERSTOWN, N, Y. UP — The Cleveland Indians and Chicago- Cubs will meet here today before an expected crowd of 10,000 In the annual “Hall of Fame” game\ at basfeball’s birthplace. Other ceremonies of the annual day of Celebration of baseball’s shrine will pay honor to Paul Waner and the late \ Harry Hellmann, who were elected to the Hall of Fame last winter. Yankees And Dodgers In Benefit Tonight NEW 7 YORK, UP —A possible World Series pre-view was on tap for an expected 70,000 fans tonight as the New York Yankees were scheduled to meet the Brooklyn Dodgers in an exhibition game for the benefit of New York’s sandlot baseball program. BUSINESS PART (Continued From Page O,a») Was “a major quake.” When the first rolling motion started just before 5 a\m., lights lit up over Southern California and switchboards were flooded \ with thousands of calif? Frightened persons scrambled to thfe streets, barefooted and in robes or in night clothing.
iSnjßr**' J9B bßkl.. e. ’ A'lwSM * MMW ■ | k * Wms ; T '■ ■ 170 Altai! \4y .'I Kefauver makes statement. IMP Kerr makes Mme. <Bs IDENTICAL PREDICTIONS coming from two Democratic presidential candidates on the same day in Washington lead to the conclusion that: somebody’s wrong. From Senator Robert S. Kerr: the nomination on the fifth or sixth ballot. From Senator Estes Kefauver: the nomination >n ythjor sixths “if President Truman ata vs neutral" (International J j
mCKTXTR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
AMERICAN LEAGUE ' ; \ W L Pct. G.B. New York 54 34 .644 Boston 49 38 .563 4% Washington 49 39 .557 5 Cleveland 49 40 .551 5%' Chicago 48 43 .527 7% Philadelphia 39 42 .481 11% St. Louis 35 56 .385 20% Detroit 28 59 .322 25% NATIONAL LEAGUE W L PcY G.B. Brooklyn 59 22 .728 New York 53 31 .681 7% St. Louis 51 39 .567 12% Chicago 45 42 .517 17 Philadelphia 43 45 .489 19% Boston , 37 50 .425 25 Cincinnati 36 53 .404 27 Pittsburgh2s 67 .272 39% SATURDAY’S RESULTS American League New York 4. Chicago 2. I Cleveland A Boston 0. Philadelphia 5. Jietroit 4. Washington 2, St. Louis 1. \ National League Brooklyn 9, Pittsburgh 1. Chicago 3, New York 0, Philadelphia 7, Cincinnati 5. Boston 6, St. Louis 2. YESTERDAY’S RESULTS American League , ; Chicago 5, New York 4. \ Boston 8, Cleveland 7 (12 innings). Washington 7-7, St. Louis 6-3. Philadelphia 8 3, Detroit 7-3 (2nd game-tie, called 9th, curfew).National League Brooklyn 8, Pittsburgh 5. New York 9, Chicago 7. St. Louis 8, Boston 4. Cincinnati 6-3,' Philadelphia 5-4 (Ist game 10 innings). ' —-4 Scientists observe that glaciers) are retreating all over the world.l Tn parts of Alaska, rock-strewn I valleys today lie bare at points where early in this century glacier ice stood hundreds of feet thick. Go to the church or your choice next Sunday.
Senators Move Into Third In American Race By UNITED PRESS Bucky Harris, whose greatest pride in a 28-year career of running big league clubs is that “I never finished last,” was shooting for ’’manager of the year” honors today with a Washington team that many experts had consigned to the bottom spot. Baffling everyone with shrewd trades- that strengthened j the lineup and with manipulations of manpower that have kept the Senators in contention all the way, Harris now has them in third place just five games behind the pace-setting Yankees'. No one expects a super miracle wljich would bring them their first pennant since 1933, but then neither did apy' one expect them to be anywhere but deep in the second division at this stage of the race, either. The Senators gained on everybody Sunday by extending their latest winning streak to five games with 7 to 6 and 6 to 3 victories over the Browns. The White Sox set back the> Yankees, 5 to 4, and the Red Sox took a firmer grip on second pla<?e by defeating the Indiana, 8 to 7 in 12 innings and sending them down to fourth ?lace. The Athletics topped the 8 to 7, the battled to a 3-3 curfew-halted second game tie in which \wo Detroit runs in the 10th were wiped off the books because there w-as not time for Philadelphia to complete the inning. The Dodgers, shooting for a runaway, stayed 7% games ahead of the Giants in the National league, winning their eighth straight game, 8 to 5, and their 13th in a row over Pittsburgh. The Giants outslugged Chicago 9 to 7, the Cardinals defeated the Braves 8 to 4, and tile Reds downed the Phillies 6 to 5 in 10 innings, then lost, 4 to 3. ; Hhrry Dorish pitched hitless bail for 1% innings tb save Saul Rogovin’s ninth victory at New York after the Yankees put on a threerun eighth inning rally. Eddie Robinson and Sherman Dollar hit Chicago homers and Joe Collins homtered for New York. It was the first White Sox victory in New York this year as they ended a sixgame losing streak. \ \ Ex-Tigers paced the Red Sox to victory at Boston. Johnny Dipon drove in Hoot Eyers with the winning run on a single;and Evers, who singled to start the rally, also hit an earlier home;run. Dick Gernert hit a Boston homer, too. Bl|iy Hitchcock hit a triple, double, and single and drew two walks to pace the A’s 14-hit opening game attack in which Wa|t Dropo homered for Detroit. Vic Wertz hit a second-game Detroit homer as the teams had their battle for nothing. The game must be replayed from the start. The Giants made 14 hits including a triple and two singles by Hank Thompson and a homer and single b'y >Sal Yvars in their triumph at Chicago. Larry Jansen, though belted for eight hits and six runs before being relieved, was credited with his 10th victory. Major league leader Hank Sauer hit his 24th homer for Chicago. The Cards collected homers by Dick Sisler, Red Schoendienst and Solly Hemus while Wilmer 'Mizell chalked up his fourth victory at St. Louis. Rookie Ed Mathews hit his 15th homer for Boston. k If you nave somennng to sell or rooms for rent try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.
MAN 83 GETS RELIEF from ARTHRITIC PAIN
He writes—l tried many remedies ' but got no relief—could not close ' my bands—now I work the garden ; and go fishing. I got Pruvo and by the third day my fingers could move more freely < and the knee joints were easier and I setter— My folks and friends were surprised to see the change. If you too suffer arthritic or rheumatic pain do as thousands do—get new triple acting Pruvo. Only , tn Pruvo can you get the new, ad-
Smith Drug Co.
OZA R K IK E _____ Itlß® ill — ANO WHAT A Wl -ANOAS£LM£RHOPNBLODIGS (> p BONUS BOY ) mW 1 l mOI comeback hes /nat the plate... (Nasabatt/ng r> T made*,, after arm 1 kaaaaawvwaa<vvvvw < *s**M«ty/2z )/£\ rR r°X L n^ OS LJ ?r«o«>awr aft lw Z*Sska I• • W \ CA E£!sitll s \ and they i? VSJ^ /SflnFc ■ W BETTER THAN k GOrM£ Y iliT Aw. , MSI AwfeA —-X ever ano our Y£rr Y x <Z</r? (TL m* -7 *• i h. enjoying P <7 <5^ jy AzTlVlk WI finfcr 1 * xoneof his -'AL TX\Jra\\/V / u.Iz — Xjkwrr DEST \ jty jerry. there a r seasons* jav) A GOfS LEFTY spade, I AtFASTEST SOUTH- [K /H8R391 Sk VvKi/SZ// IN TH MAJORS, I ✓ l4gQ»Wlflwlf 'Wi/ //A /Y I F/zvrA to th mound \ [ m I forth lions «.) I p — \ I <7-21 l\ v I '• ! ~i U 'll JL ■■>«— I \ ■ . ■ ' ■,. a ' ' ■'\\ • ' ' ' ' ■ ■ '■>-■'
Says Chinese Hate Russian Masters Senator Douglas Is Convention CHICAGO, UP — Sen. Paul H. Douglas D:-111. said today the Chinese are beginning to hate their Russian masters as a result of the Korean war and that “the soil is therefore being prepared" for a revolt. He said also that when Russian Premier Josef Stalin dies, a struggle for power may break out in the Soviet politburo “which would convulse Russia and render it incapable of aggression for a long time.T ' ' ' “If we dan deter him for a few years; from attacking, we may gain a long peace,” Douglas said in an address prepared for the opening session of the Democratic national convention. “Once the Russian dictatorship starts breaking up, the i'ce will melt rapidly.,” Douglas said is no “ironclad guarantee”! -pf peace but that the administration’s policy of “effective resistance” to Communist aggression “i? \ not only the best but is indeed) i the only hope for peace 5 in the world.” Project To Increase Game Fish In State BLOOMINGTON," Ind. UP — A project designed to increase game, fish numbers and eliminate undesirable fish in Indiana waters will begin this summer under the sponsorship Os Indiana University, it was announced today. Saul B. Saila, who received a doctor’s degree in fishery biology from Cornell University,, will serve as research associate In the university’s department of zoology for a survey of state lakes and streams. ,;J ■ ■ t ! MURRAY SAYS (Cpatinned From Page One) meetings were scheduled. Murray, appeiared before the 170-man wage policy committee today after new government-ordered talks iagain broke down oh the issue bf whether workers who’join the ujiion\ would be permitted to resign; during designated “escape periods.” Highly infromed sources in Washington said both side 9 became deadlocked on whether workers should be permitted to resign from the uhion durihg a 15-day grace period; at the start of a new contract term. I The “escape” clause had been part of previous Steelworkers’ contracts ; with industry, but Murray wanted it removed from the new, proposed agreement. Industry spokesmen took the stand that removal of the controversial clause would force workers into life membership in the union. Washington sources said Murray and |he steel spokemen had agreed on all other issued, including union security and the industry's offor of a 16-sent hourly pay ihcrease and five cents an hour in "fringef benefits. The U. S. Commerce Department has estimated that tourists spend more than $350,000,000 a year in California. ; -—■—<— —. —- - Three million bachelors — men past 36 -T- live in the U. S. today, according to the American Magazine. i In 1951 the Japanese motion picture industry released 20.8 features in addition to majiy newsreels and short subjects. If you have something to sen or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.
vanced triple combination of America's No. 1 Anti-Arthritic medication—plus Salicylamide, an amide with 5 times the analgesic potency of aspirin—pips Vitamin C. v tL c vitamin essential to bone tissue production. Pruvo pt the amazingly low price of $1.50 for trial size Is fully guaranteed to give you the greatest relief you ever have known or mopey back in full from the Pruvo Co. Use half the bottle, then decide. Get Pruvo today at your drugstore,
I j t'.' . X t'7 > K\ • J h " J BUMPED OVER by an auto, a woman lies in a Los Angeles street, another bending over-her to offer comfort as traffic halts. Alert photographer Joe Rustan happened by to get this photo even before police arrived on the scene. (International Soundphotoj EXHIBITION BASEBALL AT WORTHMAN FIELD Tuesday, July 22nd — 8:00 P.M. KLENKS vs ROCKFORD, OHIO , ■, •——. ADMISSION CHILDREN 1 15 c I The Slate Gardens MIDDLEBURY, OHIO . ' 1 —Presents—- */' ' A /■ f ® r . 6 NIGHTS JKj July 22 to 27 Inc. O -() Dancing 9:00 P.M. to 2:00 A.M<
MONDAY. JULY 21, 1952
