Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 238, Decatur, Adams County, 8 October 1952 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

I SPORTS|

; r ""‘ ,V ■' Yankees Take i ,' • ■ >'■ '■ ■ •-■-..;. >. ■ ''■ y;|» iSeries Fourth Year In Row I,■ ■ • ' ; f NEW YORK UP —Wwas st flj “The Champs” for’Tfie N<fw Yankees today; “The Buims” W'- - the Brooklyn Dodgers.; ’ The Yankees were the champion! of the bdsebal! World fpr tile fouttj straight year; and those ‘.‘Bum®' had failed again except for theif president, Walter O'Malley, with was unanimously selected as tip? world's best loser. ) I Triumphant, 4-2, over the Dodgers in the money game \of tls 1952 World Series Tuesday, tls’ 'marvelous Yankees had for th* second time in their historfe achieved the feat of winning touW consecutive world titles.; % Onl/ the Yankees 0f r 1936,.19372 1938 and had previously ac? coinplished this feat. And so, to; .day, Uasey Rtengel— ;the ipan thy ■ baseball once dismissed a "clown.” 11 stood in the record . honks alongside Joe McCarthy the only managers eVei- to pilot four straight world champions. 7 Moreover; the 63-yea.r-old, griz< zled old mail, who turned in one of the greatest managerial jobs im anybody’s memory Tuesday. haiE . decided to try for No. 5 and his£ ovvn little 4grite line in the record? book. tr “Retire.?” Stengel growled in) the J tumult of the Yankees’ vlcto-1 rtous dressing room. ‘.‘These arjsj my boys. They never quit on mi*and I'll not quit on them.” So, it will be Casey and “my boys” trying for No. 5 arid base-= ball history].inext {ear. \ .f J —- | •; First Show Starts 7 P. M. Tonight & Thursday 2 EXCITING FEATURES First Decatur Showing! , -—jj WC*J| I j>gcr | V WEAPONS! co-starring • DOROTHY HART wih PAUL STEWART —ADDED ACTION—w Ei*rrfT7j7l B Viltf* \ GEORGE REEVES 1 PHYLLIS COATES v <£■— i Fri. & Sat.—2 First Runs! “Cavalry Scout” —In Color A “ Fabylou* Senorlta” _*_O—O Coming Sun. 4— “FARGO’ and “Mark of the Renegade” —o Children Under 12 Free , ■ r

And nothing could be more fitting, for the 1952 World Series U’hich ended with Tuesday’s truly great game will henceforth be identified as "Casey Stengel’s iseHow the old master of manipulation compensated for his shoctnianned pitching staff by ‘ platooning” hisj three stars, Ed Lopat., Allie Reynolds and Vic plus) Bob Kuzava, will be one of the heartwarming World Series'stories of years to come. '• .Casey, as they say in the world of the football men who are now among us, needed the horses,) of bourse. Arid he; had them. ■/‘He had. for one, Johnny Mize, an old. man who played like a boy. And Mickey Mantle, a boy who -played like an* old pro. And Reynolds, the magnificent pitcher who hurled his way out of a basestilled. nondmiit Situation with only ' one run scored against him in relief <pf Lopat. And, last and certainly hot least. Kuzava, who . retired puke Snider and Jackie Robinson on infield pops with the bases filled and one out-in the seventh inning. i " These were the twb key innings —the fourth and seventh. / ; In- the fourth, when Lopat gave up singles tri Snider, Robinson arid Roy Campanella, filling 'the bases with none out. Stengel made his first big pitching move. He. called in 'Reynolds, the chief, to throw the best; he had at the opposition When the Dodgers Jvere threatening to brack i the; garne wide open. . \ I ; Reynolds was making his fourth appearance of the Series. He had Ipst the first gamie to, Joe Black ■ but had comei back \to beat him. in tl]e fourth game and\dave 'the sixth game for the Yankees only the day befojrd by retiring the last four hitters. ■ A, 34-year-old veteran. Reynolds i;w,as unaccustomed to such a tax ■on his arm but he came out of the .bullpen, surly and as only Reynolds can be. and bailed •out the Yankees at the expense of r enly one,.Brooklyn run. But even Reynold js’ arm is itnade of bone and muscle, apd the chief could no y t dq it plonk Hi Was laboring and. in the sixth, when Campanella lined a single to slight field off him. he signalled to #tengel to warm uil another'pitchier. .Reynolds had enough |o get bttt of the inning and Stengel. made v Ms second big rnmvp in the next ■inning. ■ . . ! He brought ip Raschi. jwhp had pitched 7 % innings.the day beiore. ? . , i Raschi, like Reynolds, was “off" *but he snuggled through (until the Dodgers filled the bases with one out ; in the seventh and Snider was “1311 Show” at the MOOSE Sat Nite OUR BIG DAYS! First Show Tonight) 6:30 Continuous Thur, from 1:30; R BE SURE TO ATTEND! | G o Eryjif Mightiest Adventure! MB '*?] , ' . •)< .;' » -KANGAROOr..*ra, |M O'HARA • PETft LAWFORD ; ’ -m. Finlov Curriw • Richard Roon* ALSO —Shortt 14c-50c Inc. Tax ■. Q ..Q !■ Fri. & Sat. —“Carbine William*” Jame* Stewart, Jean Hagen —o sun. Mon. Tues. “Son of Paleface” ..Bob Hope, Jane Russell

Richmond Is Leading Prep Team In State INDIANA POMS UP — The north, the south, the east and the west were represented in the second weekly United Press Indiana ’ high school football honor roll today, with Richmond’s powerpacked Red Devils leading for the second I straight week. Although labeled by some as havI ing a ‘ minor-league” schedule, . coach Bill Elias’ club , compiled f such a tremendous statistical edge over its five opponents there was little\ doub| the\ Wayne county crew, was “the hest in -the land.” > Richmond smashed Indianapolis . Broad Ripple last Friday, 54 to 6, > for its 17th straight win. It gave - Elias’ boys 241 points scored this season, an average of bettei- than r 48 per game, while conceding their • foes just four touchdowns and a 1 conversion. i Evansville Bosse and East ■Chi- ’ cago Washington remained second 1 and third, respectively, hut most of the remaining berths in the ’ “big ten" had new Indianapolis Cathedral, which ‘ smeared Lafayette Jeff last wj?ek-, end, 20 to 6. for its 13t|i win m a ’ row, moved up from fifth to fourth, while Jeff, previously in fourth, skidded to sevtenth. East Chicago Roosevelt and Clary Emerson, two more northern rtower?), also climbed up. RookeVelt, which hasn't been licked 'since dropping its opener to South Bfend Washington, advanced from eighth to fifth, and Emerson from ninth to eight. f, — Evansville Central, meanwhile, remained sixth; South Bend Washington. which tied NIHSC rival Mishawaka last week, dropped from seventh to ninth, and Clinton remained 10th, Three additions to the "well-re-garded” ranker Eva.nsville Memorial. .Columbia City atpd Terre Haute Wiley. rMemorial has wop its first three Columbia City is riding a five-game winning streak. Wiley* won its last three, after dropping its opener to Vincennes. \ \; x Others in the well-regarded’ ranks were Terre Haute Garfield, Vincennes, Peru, West Lafayette, Michigan Porte, Auburn and Warsaw’. 1 i i ■■ he hitter. s Then, once agaii t the nimble-brained Stengel m^de): a pitching move. This time, his man was Kuzava, a left hander of indifferent success during the season, but the perfect man to pitch to Snider because he had the fast ball to keep the Duke, who had hit four homers in the Series, from pulling the ball toward the short right field wall at Ebbets Field. Kuzava ran the count to 3 and 2 and then retired Snider on a pop fly to the infield. ' s And Stengel made the move he would have been royally secondguessed for if he had lost. He left the left-handed Kuzava in lhe game to pitch to the right handed Robinson," and ‘Casey , won. when Robinson popped to Billy Martin. , When Martiij caught the ball, Stengel leaped ouf of the Yankee dugout and rubbed his hands. He was “in” and he knew it. For Mantle, the 20-year-old kid whom, the draft board loves to look at, this series earned, the highest of plaudits. For the Dodgers unanimously agreed that Mickey had more than made up for. he Yankees’ loss of Joe DiMaggio. There is nd higher praise. High School Football Hartford City 33, Portland 0. r- ' J. FEARED B-29 (Continued From P«« On»> scopes at 2:15 p.m. Tuesday seven miles inside Japanese territory. The radar plots of the two planes’ merged eight miles northeast of the Japanese city of Nemuro, bn a peninsula jutting out from the northeast tip of Hokkaido, and miles Inside Japanese territory. Thereafter, the air force said, the screen showed only on object heading southeast across Nemuro, The object finally disappeared 'eight miles southeast of Nemuro. The B-29yent the distress call at 2’,30 p.m., alter the object had disappeared from the radarscopes. The air force explained that two airplanes maneuvering around one another would appear as a single object on radar screens. It also was possible both aircraft disappeared from the radar screens when they descended to a low altitude outside the range of the instruments. Searching air force planes found an oil slick on the sea three miles from the fishing village of Ocbiishi, about four miles from the point the object disappeared from the screens. The missing B-29 was on a routine training mission. - > Ranges are the homes of more than 60,00 P residents of Tokyo, I Japan. \

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIAN

Many Records Set In World Series NEW YORK UP — A few new pages of records, many of dubious distinction, were written into the books today for the 1952 World Series, which many baseball men rated one of the most thrilling qf all time, < n. / A total of 11 ' \ significant records wei-e set and 13 niqre wer& tied. In addition to the cumulative marks which the Yankees automatically establish every titn£ they participate in a World Series, according to a United Pres? cheek. i| Duke Snider of the Dodgers set the most noteworthy individual marks, breaking pne record and tying two more. His 24 total bases on, four homers, two doubles and four singles broke the old record of 22 set by Joe Harris of flie Washington Senators in 1925. ' Snider’s four homers tied the oldmark ?et by the immortal Babe Ruth in 1926 and Lou 1928, and his six extra ba»e rftts the old record made by Rpth in 1928 and Pete Fbx of the Tigers in 1934. The Dodger outfielder's two homers in the sixth game aiteo was h new high for a National League player a, single contest. The Yankees tied the record of four straight world championships set by their 1936-'39 predecessors and Casey Stengel equalled the mark of leading a team to toqr straight world titles \ set by ’Joe McCarthy. There also were a few’ jrecords which the players involved would like to forget. Gil Hodfees of the Dodders became tile first regular player ever to go through a sevengame series without a hit. and Gil McDougald of the Yankees set a new high for errors by a third baseman by committing four. ADLAI TAKES ’ (Continued From Page One) yember election campaign. ‘‘The general has joined loudly in the clamor about the Communi ist menace in Washington ” Stevenson said. “He implies that the federal government is deliberately concealing Communists. ’Rtit he has offered only thundering silence about a cure ... i “I think we ai)e entitled to a«k, it the Republican candidate is seriously interested sin trying to ioot Communists but of the govdrpment. or is he only interested in scaring the American people to get votes?” ■ ' ’ . i ) „ j’;-' i ■ - Columbui Man Killed As Truck Hits Auto \ ' ■ ■ ]] . ' ■ i 1 r . ' 1 COLUMBUS, Ind. UP — Willhttn S. Cox, 88, Columbus, was killed Tuesday when his auto w'as struck by a truck on Ind. 9 east of heYe.

• i - ( Jf DISTANCE winnv* \ .. _ , makes the Heart grow Fonder I 't ' ' V bwrf \ /& teffCWkw Ffi *i —i V_. - '—~ " 1 . x..s.Yh, ■•-> - \ fff B^Kil— Aa^~'" L ■ * \ i Mm*” . ' — -"■’ ~ MEaffBWMMMKM**- ) \ * - \ iwfe. JcK -\ ASP Ik v S Xx ***- V ■**; ‘ Uh ■ i- • ■\ . ■ > ’T I ■ ■' I- ■' -- . • • ’! ■• ’ . , I • . I •■ ■V ' ; . V . J lou’ll discover this about a Buick: . There’s the ease of deep, soft seats for one makes your heart grow fonder of this trim and The more you drive it. the more you like it; * h ”‘7*" d J±l2-r.' Inove • ,,bou, room f ° r ” ,raVele ? u . . the longer yous trip, the louder your praise. arms, legs, shoulders. ' But words can’t do justice to a Buick m motion. x , k . i .ii . k-j L->n ♦•!! There’s Dynaflow Drive* taking all the chore Only you can. That s what people tell us. And we 11 tell out of drivingt and giving your whole ride a When will you come sample this experience you wny. : „ , , , satiny smoothness without trace of jerkiness yourself? You can drive a Buick three, four, five hundred or driving tension. „ . . ~ ~ , miles in a iingle day, and feel fresh enough to ■ , \ ir.um- ..• i accessonestnm and models are to change keep right on going 1 There s a hobdful of thrilling, tireless power without notice. 'Standard on Roadmaster, optional at extra „ ~",L,3 . ~ (rom a high-compression, valve-in-head Fire- mi m otbtr Serits. iOplitnal al <xtra cat. . - Sou can romp up high Mh, arms, itratghtawajs, b atl 8 Engine that whips Out miles like a tarpon 1 ease through traffic-tangled towns, clock off hour ree ls off line. : I !—’ , \ after hour of relaxed and pleasurable driving— , . * 1 S&&C SI and be no more tired than a neighborhood jaunt There s the soft, steady, solid, swerve-free go- ocrreo aiithaaOßlLFS ARE BUILT would make vou °* a cod-spnng-cushiorted nde that s well WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUiLi „ worth the million-plus dollars itcost to engineer. How come this comfort-rich ground-covering m vßb S SSPAS ability in a Buick? There’s all this and more-much more-that J WILL BUIID THEM \'' ' \ - ' - Itr great television evette See The TV Foothaff Game of tho Wook every Saturday and Buiclr's Own TV Show every fourth Tuesday SAYLORS MOTOR COMPANY N. 13th Street • v ! • J Phone 3-2705 '

Tommy Holmes Has Choice As Manager i NEW YORK UP — Tommy Holmes had I his choice today of rqanaging M|e Milwaukee farm team of the Boston Braves or the Elniira, N. farm team of the Brooklyn Dodgers. tt< was leaijied that the squeakyvoicedDodger outfielder,*.who began the 1952 Reason as the manager but ) was released in May, could have pither job simply by .saying, “yw’ In either case, he probably would be a playing mana K er. , ). < LISTS OUTLETS (Couttnued From Page One> house, Smieh;. First State Bank; Chamber of Cojnmerce; Mies Recreation. Area retail distribution, L. R. Zintkmaster in charge; Doc’s. Car Dock; Connie’s Market; Coppess Market; Monroe, Stucky Co., E. C. Martz; Preble, Lister Grocery, Wole hie store; Monmouth, Wilbur Snman .stofe; Berne, Simon M., Schwarfi*. Berne Witnes?; Geneva. Ears Dawaid, Justice of the peace. ' Feed dealers and elevators. Ray Heller in charge; Salem store, Salem; four Burk elevatbrs> at Winchester street, Decatur, Monroe, Peterson and Willshire, O.; Farm Bureau Co-€)p. Monrbe; Heller Coal Feed and Supply, West Monroe street. Decatur; Preble Equity Exchange, Preble; Steifel Grain Co., First street, Decatur; ’Farm Bureau .elevator. Pleasant Mills; Decatur Hatchery, Monroe street, Debatur. Implement dealers. Ferd Klenk jn charge; Dierkes Implement kales, | North Thirteenth street, Decgtur; E. C. Doehrman sale barn, route 3, Decatur; Klenk's, W«i?t Madison street. Decatur; ■Morrison Farm Store. South Thirteenth street, Decatur; Reihie Tractor and Implement sales, Nuttmari akenue, ’ Decatur; Steffen Implement Cb., North Third street, Decatur. \ . . | ...... J . According to the i species, the vringspread of the condor may r/aeh 11, feet. s ~ X -4— --.— .I. — -

- | j OZARK i~K~E | ' j i ” ' \.' J’ j • \"J / &ROKE A6’IN,CMNAH.WC SOLE'S GITOUTTOTH' W BETCHA THEY VwBUT WONOUH HOW BUT AH DONE PAID JH AIRPORT WITH THESE KIN HARDLY WAIT \ COACH SHAG SCOWLUHS BX TICKETS MISS STORMY TILL YUH START , , BEEN MAKIN'OUT >| I ( SHAS ynu'RE 2 H/KNIGHT SENT US AN'TAKE W PACKIN'THAT /> WITH TH'TEAM I - 5? A OFF PER TH' WILDCATS' jjfr PIGSKIN A 50 FUR f Il ' v A STAfIiYHMr -dR AG IN, OZARKf... < 7 ( U - » 11 'l-' A< ; " •' I MsJfj-SSS - —

TWO EXPRESS (Co* tin wed From Page Pie) fire. One coach, tossed on qnd, toppled a footbridge across which passengers were hurrying. Four of the Night Scot’s coaches ’and its engine were derailed. The crash stopped every clock in the station kt 8:19 a. m. There vras a moment of silejnce afteHthe crashes. Then stunned, dazed passengers crawled, from the wreckage, from turned coaches and on to the platform. Screams and shouts from ;the injured and trapped broke" the eerie silence. ) ! J A doll carriage stuck out the window of a wrecked coach. Blood seeped through the doorway of another and dripped onto the traqks. The slightly injured began to pull and drag the dead seriously injured from wreckage piled 30 feet high. Soon there were 500 rescue workers on the scene, including doctors and nurses. ■Fifty United States air force doctors, nurses and litter-bearers from the South Ruislip, Bushy park and Bovington air stations afound rushed to ihe Harrow station. They were directed by Capt. Joseph Dillehay, Mount Morris, 111.. j At intervals over the station’s loudspeaker system, the command “keep quiet” boomed out. Rescuers were listening for cries—some very faint—to guide them to trapped and irijured. | Priests and clergymen of many denominations knelt amid the litter administering last rites and comforting the injured. ; It was the worst train wreck since 19<15. In that World War 1 y;e|tr/ 227 persons were killed in a train accident. Previously ]he worst wrecks had been in 18®9, ’ ; whek 80 persqns were killed and in 1879 when 78 were killed. COMMUNIST i 1 (Coatißwed From Page Owe) , ed headquarters oL the French . Communist party in Paris. The interior ministry said that other cities involved in the searches today included Rouen, Tulle, . Nantes, St. Nazaire, Bordeaux, Toulouse, Nancy, La Rochelle, Saverne and Viroflay.

BOWLING SCORES G. E. ALLEYS G. E.' Women’s League Team No. 4 won 3 over Team No. 1; Team Nol 3 won 3 over Team No. 2. High’ scores: G. Reynolds 187, Kleinhenz 164, Moore 168, Engle 164, Plasterer 159. Monday Nite League Office won 3 over Packers; Stators won 2 over Flanges. 600 serie?: Laurent 641 (213-235-193). 200 scores; Jackson 227, Patrick 202; G. E.- Fraternal West End Restaurant; won 2 from Peterson Elevafor; |G. E. Club won 2 from Teeple Truck Lines; Elks won; 2 from. Burke’s; K. of C.: won 2 from Basablanca. 200 sepres: P. Hoffman 209, Buuck 267, F.' Huffman 201-200, . 11 ■ ■ - zli . : ’

Public Sale (NIGHT SALE) ' I, the undersigned, will sell at public auction my herd of High Grade Holstein Heifers, located 5 miles East of Bluffton, Indiana, on State Road No. 124, on Wednesday Night, October 15, 1952 i Sale Starting at 7:00 P. M. , s ' • ■ ■ -2«“ HIGjH WISCONSIN HOLSTEIN HEIFERS y AB Bue to Freshen Soon > s ■ T-. R. &.• Bangs Tested—Calfhood Vaccinated J Thestei Holstein Heifers were all 2 years old in August. They are bred to. aft eligible to register, Holstein bull from the Herman Keipfer herd. due to start freshening October 17 to December. This is an outstanding herd of heifers, they, are uniform, large in size and nickly marked. You are invited to inspect this herd anytime before day of sale. You will also receive a vaccination certificate with each .animal-MISC.:-r-300 bales wheat straw, no rain. CONSIGNED: Spotted Poland China male hog. 18 months old. r TERMS—CASH. N<!>t responsible in,case of accidents. Sale will be held under; tent. i OBED GERBER, Owner Ellenberger Bros.—Auctioneers Farmers 4/Merchants Bank—Clerk. 8 13 - ■' ■ V

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1952

Faulkner 20$, Shoaf 233. Custer 207, Bayles 223. J, Murphy 212, House 221. ‘ ' Half of the trade, by value, of the United States passes through the ports 'of New York state. SQUARE DANCE Fri. Nite MOOSE