Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 211, Decatur, Adams County, 6 September 1952 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Decatur Yellow Jackets Lose Football Opener To Auburn Last Night, 31-6 _—_ ■ — 4- ■ 1 ; 4 }
/ * Decatur Yellow Jackets dropped their footbgll opener, at .Auburn last night to the discordant tune of 31-6. It’s true enough that they, made a poor showing in the beginning of the 1952 football season, but there was enough of a potential shown to make the observers, think the Jackets may be able to lick the bejabbers out of the majority of the schedule. •Time after time Decatur’s light—extremely light—eleven went in to try .and hold back the ponderous Red Devils line. No good. The average weight on their line is • abput 175, theJackftts were about 150. < The heartbreaker of the ill-fated evening came early for the scrappy went for' a touchdown early in the first'quarter on . a pas# from Morrison —it was disallowed because of a backfield in matioh penalty. Coaclj Bob Worthmain and assistant Dorwin and Just about everybody on the Decatur aide thinks this was the action that could have told the story* "If only they made that first score.’’ * First blood was drawn in .the second quarter when Red DeVil Muzzlllo got a hand off torßelagrhngje who ran 30 yards ‘ for a toftcjtydown. They ’ did it again in the second quarter when Webb took the bill 30 yards op a to make the score T 2-0.; Tommy Reynolds of Auburn ran 70 yards for a pdorei op an interv cepted Decatur lateral' in the third quarter. All during the game Auburn had been planting' sleepers way off either and sometimes both ! ends. Decatur spotters caught all but ope, the ohe that paid off in the fourth quarter- “for the Red ‘Devils. ~ I j The J last Score ihalked up, for Auburn 'came in the fourth when Winebrenner , plunged through the center, of the Jackets’ line and ran v 35; yards to score. , \ Decatur’s only tally came in the action-packed fourtft when Rowley battered through the center of, the Auburn line to save the Jackets a , humiliating goose-egg. i?, A star in the Dedatur ga(bxy for \tbis eeasbb is definitely Rowley/ '■He' fought his way to two first downs in the last quarter and showed ’em all how to be a full-' I 'back during the wpole game t ■ - Decatur Auburn LE—Kohnq Reynolds LT—Custer Knisely LG—Roop J 'Gorrell C—Thomas .J Myers RG—Knit tie , Hathaway LRT Conrad \ Souder RE-HrbWr , ’\ Webb QB—Morrison ' MuzzlHo LH—Gallow , I Casselman RH*—Pollock ' / ’ 1 Delagrange FB —Sowidy Hildebrandt 1 ! Score by quarters: / iDjechtUr 0 0 0 6 — 6 Auburp _4-L 4 0 12 /6 13—31 ■ . i To satisiy ail kinds of heeds, America’s nail producers make more than 100 different types of Won kid steel nails.
AIR CONDITIONED V SUN. MON. TUES. j Continuous Sun. from 1:15 In Wonderful Technicolor! AjVILL ROGERS JR. JANE WYMAN “THE STORY OF WILL ROGERS” I’ 7 James Gleason, Eddie Cantor ' V i - k . ■ ■ I ■ ,' ' ' ALSO—Shorts 14c-50c Inc. Tax ' —O—O—- <■ 1 ■ L J' ‘ ' - 4 TODAY—“Pride of St. Lbuis” ■ Dan Dailey, Joanne Dru ALSO-*—Shorts 14c-50c Inc. Tax ■ I’■ Ih '"-'i 7. ' 7, if...jiiiiii Ji iija yiMr |j | j I j.Bpw - TODAY & SUNDAY Contirfuous Both pays j ROY ROGERS “UNDER NEVADA SKIES” & “THE RACKET” Robt. Mitchum, Scott Only ,14c-30c Inc. Tax
MAJOR AMERICAN LEAGUE ■ j W L Pct. G.B. New York 4L—- B<J 56 .588 Cleveland 7? 58 .570 2% Washington 1 72 64 .529 8 Philadelphia L._ f7l 64 .526 8% Chicago 70 64 .522 9 Boston _ 69 64 .519 9% St. Louis Detroit - 44 90 .328 35 I national League W L Pct. G.B; -Brooklyn 84 46 .646 New York J 78 52 .600 6 St. Louis Philadelphia' — 72 61 I .541 13% Chicago -2 66} 70 .485 21 1 Cincinnati . 59 75 .440 27 Boston 58 74 .439 27* Pittsburgh J_-_ 39 98 .285 48% YESTERDAY’S RESULTS J American League \ \ & Philadelphia 3, New York 2. si Washington 2, Boston 0. / Cleveland 3, Chicago 0. Only games scheduled; i National League | | New York 5, Philadelphia 4. ■' Boston 3, Brooklyn L ; St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh o.' ; Only games scheduled. Bobby Dykes Winner j By Split Decision NEW YORK, UP; i—Despite fact* cuts that required 10 switches, Gil Turner hoped tcdat 1 to meet his upset conqueror, Bqbby Dykes, in thieir contracted return j welterweight contendeis' bout at Phlla--delphia within 40 dajcs. Dykes, a tall and'somewhat terrific Texan, woni a/split 10-rotfnd decision over Turner of Philadelphia in an elecitrifyihg fight before 4,144 at Madison Square Garden Friday night. ' ‘ ' J.. / The from San An--tonfb, who had gone into tl?e ring an underdog at 8-5, sliced dusky Turner's cheek sb badly it required s|ix stitches and he gashed' the left brow so tihit four sitches were needed. Jin addition; Turner had very/ sore lower ftp, which bled from an inside ciut in every round. J /Dykes’ Who suffered the onljH knockdown in- the | fifth rounds planned today to fight in San Am tdhlo Sept.. 23. His' opponent will be one of two middleweights:! Chebo: Hernandez or Cisco Saenzt ’ \i | Manager Jimmy Parks! said, “Bobby didn’t suffer a Scratch last night., He’ll fight in &an Antpnio on the 23rd. And if TUrper is to fight in mid-Octobe% Bobtjy will! fight him again then.’- j Joe Thomas Named Assistant At LU. BI.OOMINGTON, Ind. UP — Joe assistant ‘in baseball, basketball and football !\ at QePauw University; has been splinted to a similar post at Indiana University. J■ ■ ...'[ ■ I; 11 : ’j; | 1. V. athletic 'qtrifctor Paul J. Harrell said ThoniW/Wlll be head freshman basketball dhd basdball coach and wil asiiat the Hoosier frosh grid squad. I r, , \ I Hi:\ ■i ■ 11 Trade in a Good Town—Decatur! » h.| I 1 ii| lij'/ii j
, ir . i h'-. hh r ?. ■ ■; Box Offteeri Open* 7 O’c lock SUNDAY ONLY v “CHICAGO CALLING” I Dan —; First Run — and — “FRENCH IE” - Color joel McCrea, Shelley Winters —<Uu. 1 1 - Last Time Tonight - “RATON PASS” J I Dennis Morgan, Steve Cochran & “IN OLD MISSOURI 1 ” With Weaver Brfca. & Elvlry ; O—O ’-p • - Children Und*r 12 Free Mon. & Tues. — Robert T*yl4i k In “Vengeance Valley” “ = ■ i nMO \ < j h . i
Dodgers And * Giants Open I 5-GameSeries By UNITED. PRESS ! Deep in the valley beneath historic Coogan’sjßluff, those diet-hard Giants begin ■ a last-ditch jatand against the Dodgers today, hoping against hope for another miracle. And it wouldn’t be Wise to bet against them idoing it. Not those determined opportunists of- Dandy Leo Durocher, who laugh at/odds but almost cause their followers heart failure by those miractilous finishes. They open a five-game | final stand against Dodgers With a double-header this afternoon and they were only six games behind as they started it out. That makes the odds against them pretty/long. yet at this same stage of the race a year ago they were 5% games out and eventually caught up. Both clubs were scraping the \ bottom of the barrel for pitehers. Durocher nominated rookie Bill Connelly and lefty Max Lanier. Lanier. particularly has been ineffective against the predominantly right-handed Brooklyn power; But Brooklyn was banking on Cat! Erskine and Clem Labine, both of them recent sufferers fronr arm.and' shoulder j miseries. \ L The Giants have had the big hex on Brooklyn (all season and show an edge of 11 victories to six defeats.' 11 ,i. '• \.j I' ■ Friday, the 'Giants finished ’tunihg up for the'big battle by defeating the Phillies, 5 to 4, coming from behind for the third straight time. At thd spme time, the Dodgers skidded again in Boston, losing 3 to 1 to Braves- right-hander Jim Wilson, who pitched six hits ball and won his 12th game. In the American league,/ the Yankees suffered another lots to the spunky Athletics* 3 to 2. While the Indians climbed to Within 2% games >of the Jeague lead with 3 to 0 victory over the White; Sox * in a night game. . i The Senators made it six victories in a row. topping' the Red'. Sox, 2 to 0, while in the only bther game the Cardinals blanked, the Pirates, 4 to 0, _ under, the lights as Vinegar Bend Mizell struclt out 11 batters. f Early Wynn of the Indians pitched a four-hit shutout for his 19th victory and big Luke EJaster smashed a three-run homer to ‘beat the White Sox, Wynni who struck out five and walked only “twq, allowed \only two runners to reach second. Easter’s homer, off ‘ Bill Pierce; was h,is 26th and followed singles by Bob Avila and Larry Doby in the fourth. k Mizell yielded seven hits to beat the Pirates. Bill Bell, 18-yea T-old right-hander who pitched threlt nohit games for Bristol, Tenn;, in the Appalachian league, gave up six hits and walked eight batters in his six-inning major league debut. Tommy Glaviano hit a tworun homer in the fourth and Dick Sister walloped a bases-eii.pty homer in the fifth. 1 ! ■ , Ji h ADLAI MOVES <Coatinned Prom On»l not repay him in kind, but 1 would thank him to read more carefully what I don’t believe he write himself.’’ _ JI This reflected Stevenson’s pride in the fact S that he personally writes the final draft of his speeches. Apparently he thinks Eisenhower speaks from texts prepared by others. • ' IKE PLEDGES > (Continned From Pngn OnO eminent control anil protect i4 rnv ers’ independence ... <■. “And, a fair share is not merely 90 percent of parity — but /full parity.” | '" j■ J ' As part of the long-range goaL he proposed a four-point program including: * J. ”■ 1. “They must be cleansed? of politics” by creation of a bipartisan agricultural commission!as promised in the GOP platform. \ 2. They must be "genuinely farmer-run operations, with /maximum responsibility decentralized to states, counties and districts.” 3. They must be "bettep adapted to regional, state and local conditions." 4. "We must find sound methods of obtaining greater protection for our diversified farms, our f producers of perishable foods,"' such a*s meat, milk, eggs, frfaits and vegetables and "non-perish-ables” like oats, barley, rye and i * soybeans. 1 ’■ ’ V !- J i . i- ’ • Ml
' J ; ,■& I DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR,
High School Football Garrett 24, Portland 0. Warsaw 14, Plymouth 6. Mlsslssinewa 31, Bluffton 7. . Elkhart 26, Fort Wayne North 19. \ Mishawaka 20, Fort Wayne South 6- V 1 ' Wabash 34, Fort Waykie Concordia 18. Richmond 27, Fort Wayne Central Catholic 6. ■ Peru 27, Kokomo 14. Huntington 13, Marion 0. Rensselaer 32, Monticello O.\ Elwood 14, Hartford City 6. Decatur Ministers Will Meet Monday The Decatur ministerial association will hold its first meeting of the fall at the Zion Evangelical and Reformed church Monday morning at 10 o'clock. \ All ministers are to be present, as ‘ considerable business will be discussedBlocky Slightly damaged Damage of S2OO was caused Friday when a car driven by Louis Uonowerie, 51, Cincinnati, 0., struck a cement block accidentally dropped from a Gottschalk Supply Co., truck driven by Jay E. Conrad, 51, Betnb. Uonowerie’s car, headed south on U. S. 27 at, the south city limits, hit the block and skidded along the side of ‘the road and came to rest after hitting a tree. No one was injured. Trailer Wrecked East Os Decatur ; Glaring bright lights of an oncoming car Friday night on highway 224 at about 10 p. m. are reported to; have caused a diesel trailer rig to have gone off the road and on its side in a ditch. The mishap occurred six miles east as the truck was headed west. Reports of deputy sheriff Jim Cochran and state trooper Ted Biberstine, who investigated, state the! driyer, William Lee Clayton, 35, Stotts City, Mo„ said i oncoming bright lights made him ! drop the rear wheels on his ’trailer off a sharp edge on the side of the road. He attempted to get the wheels back on the road when the trailer veered into i a ditch pulling the tractor'with it. In the cab was another driver who was akleep; he is unidentified. Traffic is, reported to have bsen tied up for at least an hour and a half; in both directional, it taking three wreckers to get the Mg rig back on the road. Damage is estimated at S2OO. No one was injured to any extent. j EISENHOWER (Coatinued From Page OnO \ Taft 'has said he is ready to Confer with the GOP candidate. Eisenhower said In Chicago Friday he plans to meet the senate GOP policy chairman "at an early date." He said he expects Taft to lead a important section” of the Republican campaign. Eisenhower did not amplify and Taft ; indicated he had no advance tipoff on what Eisenhower was talking about. k It is reported Taft will seek these assurances from Eisenhower: 1. A promise Eisenhower will wage an all-out campaign for the presidency — naming names .and punching at the administration’s, foreign and domestic policies with no quarter given or asked. 2. Assurances there will be no suggestion from Eisenhower that the Taft-Hartley labor law- should be repealedl despite Eisenhower’s stand that laws in themselves can’t make indn work. 3. Some kind of assurance that men whose views are anathema to Taft wuold not be brought into an Eisenhower cabinet, blocking possible appointment of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey as secretary of state, ; • i ■■ i J ■ ' 7 ! Trade in a Good Town —Decatur.
- - I! II 111 MJ I —R!— I ill. Adams County Riding Club HORSE SHOW Sponsored by Merchants of Decatur > .‘' ■ I at I J ' HANNA-NUTTMAN PARK SUNDAY, September 7£h — 1:00 P. M. RAIN DATE—BEPTEMBER 14th No Admission" Charged. >
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h uiiiM mil ' MINOR AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W L Pct. G.B. Milwaukee 99 52 .656 ’ Kansas City __i. 87 64 .576 12 St. Paul L—j_ 79 71 .5g3 20 Minneapolis —i 78 73 .517 21 Louisville 75. 76 .407 24 Indianapolis — T 79 78 .483 26 Columbus 67 831 .447 31% Charleston L 45 10L .300 53% YESTERDAY’S RESULTS Columbus .6, Louisville 4. Minneapolis 12, Milwaukee 2. Kansas City 8, St. Pail 7 (11 ini nings). - ' . i J : Indianapolis 6, Charlei iton 2. > , J J ‘ : 7" Challenge Russia To Sign Treaty WASHINGTON, UP — Russia will suffer a propaganda beating if It tries to squirm jirt of the new Big Three Auhtiian treaty proposals, U. S. officials said tod«y- v . I.? ' The United States, I ritain, and France announced Friday night they are revising their short treaty draft to mjeet the four major Soviet objections. They challenged Russia, in identical “put up Or shut uj>” notes to sign the treaty in a now meeting of the Big F our dept ty foreign ministers which they said .they were calling in London '29. ; J - I' ; • J' A . Jobless Pay Claims r ! Decrease In State ; ? INDIANAPOLIS, (UP) — Jobless pay claims in Indiana drop- ( ped. 37 percent during the last week of August compared with tfte previous week, t tiq Indiana , employment security (ftvision said, J tVdey. A ’I ' ] 4 - ■ / » The division \Laid a reduction of , 11,tOd unemployment \pay> claims during the week resuliied from a ’ boom of job placements from i Lake county, slowly recovering from the steel strike, to the Evansville area, where ol facials not’ed a “substantial 'industrial boom.”- ' V ’ M SAVAGE ATTACK (Coattawed From P»|;e Owe) • near Hamburg in Norlheast Kd- • rea. i In the battle i forth i Sandbag Hili outpost. the Americans fought hand-to-hand wltli the Rfeds tor more than four hours. | The initial Communist attack took place about midr igljt after the enemy poured 1,200 rounds of mortar and artillery fire at the V. N. defenders. •The Reds succeeded lin dislodging the Americans but later were forced to withdraw under a fierce Allied jeounter-attack th it left the slopes :of the hill littered with Communist dead. “Everyone who camo stayed—■ because they were duad,” said' Brig. (Gen. Samuel T. William. Dallas, Tex., commandler of the 25th division. ' . , The. sth air force announced Ametican F-86 Sabrejets knocked down 2b Communist MIG-Is’s this weelt, : probably, r destroyed two and damaged 19. Twj Sabres were destroyed by MIGu in aerial combat, wftiie five Other Allied planes were lost to Red ground fire or unknown causes . 9 1 oI Household Scrapbook I BY ROBERTA LEE v ft I tn —“—M Plano Keys Keep the piano keys white by rubbing once in a while with a cloth dipped in alcohol, then dry ■ with another cloth. Do not allow the alcohol to get on the varnished surface of the piano as iis a varnish remoyir; Fruit Stains y To remove fruit stains from the hands, moisten cornmeal with vinegar and . apply. Or, g*ease the hands with lard, then Mrash with soap and water. —- - i
Brilliant Star Os Theater Dies joday Is Taken By seath Ir, • \ SEW YORK, I*— Gnrtrude Lawrenfce, brilliant sitar ofTthe Englishspeaking theater, died at New Y’ork Hospital today bf a Iwer ailment. siss Lawrence died‘qt 8:30 amWl|| her husband, Richard Aldrich, andt! close friends at |w?r bedside. AldHch said her condition had “tajjen a turn for tftd jworse” after complications sei in her treatment for infectioup hepatitis. She had spent 44 pf jfter 50 ybars of life on the stage.; ■ I ’I s|ss Lawrence 14ft the chat of ’"Th® King and |j’ Ithe Richard Rodgers — Hhmmerstein smaSh-hit musical version of “Anna andijthe King of Bia'in," Aug. 19 to ent<r the hospital, i M|ss Lawrence!, bprn in .London, July! 4, 1902, made stage debut whep she was (jnly 6. Tfte play, fittingly, was “liabes in theOwood.” Shei fitet appeared in thisj country in P'Cfttqrlot’s Revue of 1524.” > J V Among her greafceat hilts vjrere “Su|an and God” jartd “Lady in the spark.” h She lived with TO husband in New York and also had a bomb at Dennis,
JNfese Stag Picnic I SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7th J M. on ! I Mt BRAID’S Woods I * J<.4 Miles South on Mud Pike J Fw i ■ Purchase Now or at the Gate $1.50 | Pr. E M,T OF ENTERTAINMENT | I ■ I I ' .1 II jObnEceryDayAt | ’CONNIE’S I FTJ j Shopping Center j f LOW PRICES 1 HI * L I S - No - 1 Fancv I Watermelons MICHIGAN 20 tu 28 tbs. Potatoes 29c I I S L?- ’2-99 | TRUCKLOAD of PEACHES . • / ' EVERYDAY AT ! I CONNIE’S MARKET —■— | Applesauce Sauerkraut I 2 10C C an , N y IQCcan My Um - Beata Belngna >Oc... 39c J WISCONSIN Trv Our I- OPEN-EYE i ■ M ! SWISS J «•!<•• Made I Cheese Bake! I. Goods V ' 5 Miles South of Decatur on U. S. 27 11. rdREN|E v F N,NGS ' | p .1 UNTIL 10:00 O’CLOCK • I 1 '■
lAdams County Cattle • Win*Places At Fair I I. ' . ’ I ; ‘ ‘ ' ft : In the Red Poll state fair show, ftViliiam Kohne & sons placed 7th Iwith a pair of yearlings and 3rd in the get of sirb clhss. got 3rd on a senior heifer calf. In the Guernsey cattle show, ; Pete Lehman plated 4th -with a 3 year old bull. lln the class over 5 years he ! placed 6th. In a second class of cows he got a 2nd. In the producer of cow class, Lehman placed 6th and in the prbducter of dam Bth.. J Rolandes Llechty jh a <l- a bull 'calf place 8thl; a heifer under 2 years placed Bth. A hejfer under 18 months was 9th and, of sire group was,7th. placed 7th and his junior get of sire group plated sth. ' ' r Corn Picking Contest Slated For Oct. 17 j Members of the Purdue University agricultural engineering staff will serve as officials for the In- , diana mechanical corn picking contest, Oct. 17. The contest will be on the Marbro farm three miles southeast, of Rushville. «C. L. Hill, extension agricultural engineer, will be contest chaiirman. He will also be content chairman and supervisor of judges for the national contest at the same farm, the following day. ■r I .
AATUAPAY,. SEPTEMBER 6, 1952
LIfIBERLOST DRIVE-IN THEATRE GENEVA, IND. \ L FIRST SHOW at 7:30 P. M. , / 2nd at 10:00. I SAT., fSUN., MON. Sept. 6,7, 8 Regular Admission M O I I I ’ t * £ Se ■ ww t • p - s <5 ink X A Ikii 1 o H| J- ' J -i- -. il • . ‘ -Q J ■■■ - JV;i
