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The Ludington Daily News from Ludington, Michigan • Page 6

Location:
Ludington, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WAtSESiX THE DAILY MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, SPORTS ME TOLO TO PROTECI CHICAGO, Dec. Armed with plans and advice for protecting their jobs, members of- the American Football Coaches association headed for the scenes of all-star games or winter quarters today. The plan for fighting back at criticism characterized as unfair, which has cost many coaches their places, was suggested by D. O.

(Tuss) Me- Laughry of Brown university, chairman of the committee on ways and means of making the assaciation more to the members. The advice on how to make the coach's position more secure was dispensed by H. Stegeman, athletic director at the University of Georgia. McLaughry suggested that a committee' be appointed to investigate any charges of unfan- dismissal and to give the- cases nationwide publicity. The committee will be named by Dana X.

Bible of the University of Nebraska, who succeeds Daniel E. McGugin, of Vandertoilt as president. Hours were devoted Wednesday to discussion of proposed changes in. the playing code, taut no one had anything to say on what suggestions might receive favorable action. Other officers elected were Bierman, Minnesota, first vice president; Edward L.

Casey of Harvard, second vice- president, and D. O. McLaughry of Brown, third vice president. W. H.

Cowell of New Hampshire was re-e 1 secretary-treasurer and AMn (Bo) McMillan, of Kansas State college replaced Casey on the board of trustees. Goldman Suggests Managers' Board Proposes Group Act as Liason Officers Between Boxing Commissioners NEW YORK, Dec. Football listens to suggestions from its coaches as to how the game should be run and from all accounts the sport is doing all rlghit. So a couple of members of the boxing game, which is not doing well at all, wonder if an advisory board of fight managers to make suggestions occasionally to iboxiing commissions wouldn't help things a little in the sport of nostril nudging. It's not nearly as farfetched as it sounds when explained by Sammy Goldman, manager of the former light-weight champion, Tony Canzoneri, and pilot at odd times of such warriors as Pal Moran, Jatoez White Basil Galiano.

G'oldman suggests a managers board, consisting of Jimmy Bronson, who was Gene Tunney's chief advisor; Charlie Harvey, the veteran who has handled a host of great fighters; Jack Hurley of Duluth, manager of Billy Petrolle, and, if you insist, Sammy Goldman. Their duties would consist of acting as liason officers between commissions wherever acute problems of the ring arose and veteran minds acquainted with all the dodges but never susceptible to them, could be of assistance. New Vest Pocket Fish Digests Have Pictorial Section LANSING, Dec. who aren't sure whether the catch on their hook is a bluegill or a sunfish, or a brown or rainbow trout can now turn to the booklet that was issued them with their fishing license. The digest of fishing laws for 1934-35 issued by the department of conservation with licenses contains four pages of pictures of the more common species of fish.

The digests, issued this month, are about one third the size of those issued in recent years, with a resulting saving of about $4,000. All of the 1,800 license agents of the conservation department are now supplied with 1934 general-rod licenses and ail persons over 18 years of age taking fish from the inland waters of the state after Monday, Jan. 1 must be supplied with one of these licenses. Muskegon Girls' Team Is Booked For Game Friday The L. B.

Loc Independents, n. fa.sL women's basketball team of Muskesson, has been booked to appear in the preliminary attraction at Oriole hall Friday night against the Young Woman's club of Ludington. The Muskcgon team is reported to be an extraordinarily high class women's outfit, which has been playing in Grand Rapids, Grand Haven, Holland and other places. In the main attraction tomorrow night Ludington Orioles will try to break the string of victories over them by the Alumni. Neuman Is First To Buy License Edmund Neuman of 601 Fifth street was the first Ludington man to purchase a 1934 general fishing license at Hanson's pharmacy.

The general red' license fee is 50 cents and entitles the holder to all kinds of fishing in season. Others who obtained licenses are as follows: Adam Snow, Dr. Lars Switzer, Mack Thibert, Ed Holzbach, Alvin Garcia, Herb Anderson, Frank Klavinski, Sam F. Meers, Joe S. Zymanski, Wm.

Case, Ed Kissel, Louis Smith, Earl Keith and Clarence Keith. MT. CLEMENS, Dec. Harburn, 126 pound flight fighter, won the main six-round engagement on a boxing card Wednesday night, outpointing Jimmy Rankin, 127, Detroit. Louis Handler.

146, Detroit, knocked out Silent Hartrnan, 144, Flint, in the first of six scheduled rounds. Other bouts: Glen Buel, 136, Flint, outpointed Otto Worth, 136, Detroit; Mickey Haifa, 118, Detroit, defeated Eddie Nathan, 120, Flint (4); Young Ritchie, 147, Detroit, defeated Cecil Lockerty, 144, Romeo, (4). Ivan Harbun Wins Clemens Bout BOWLING A GIFT WORTH WHILE Industrial League W. L. Pet.

Betka Garage 23 7 .767 J. C. Penney 18 12 .600 EliasQlm Market 14 16 .467 Recreations 12 18 .400 Public Service 12 18 .400 Crane Service ..11 19 .367 Waste Paper Dollar Bills Mean Less to Boy Than Pennies LORAIN, Dec. Attilla Kranyak is only flve years old, but he's an accomplished spendthrift. He found a hidden roll of $125 in the home of his father, a restaurateur, mounted his bicycle, rounded up some playmates and started on a spending spree.

Some of the bills overflowed the leather tool kit of his he stuffed those in his pockets. The gang visited parks, candy stores, soda Attilla began showiering his little friends with bills. He got rid of $80 before Daddy Kranyak caught up with him. Attilla, the father explained, realized the value of pennies, nickels and dimes, but paper money meant little to his youthful mind. BOXING (By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) Bats, 131 (i, Philadelphia, outpointed Eddie Cool, Philadelphia.

(10); Al Kuore. 185, Philadelphia, outpointed Popper Stopper, 179, LeiperviUe, Pa (8). Geno. LaSalUi. 111., outpointed Scotty Scotten.

128, Indianapolis. (lOi; Mtycr Oniee. 147 1 Philadelphia, outpointed Jackie Purvis. 153. Indianapolis, (10); Houey Boy Brown, 147.

Louisville. out-pointed Nate Goldberg. H5. lu- (6). LOS Zivit, 1-12, Pittsburgh, outpointed Rudy Ayon, 139'-.

Los Angeles, (4); Eddie Zivlc. 136, Pitti'burgh, knocked out Pete Cardenas. 137, Los Angrtoe. (3). The Mechanics' lead in the Industrial Bowling league was scarcely shaken Wednesday night when the J.

C. Penney five scored a 2 to 1 victory over the Recreations. The result of this match was highly favorable to the Penneys in their second place position. Eliasohn's five met and defeated the bottom place Crane Service quintet in two of three games, the series being featured by the. highest and lowest bowling scores of the evening.

Rus Rasmussen came two points of tying Bogus' game record of 257 when he hit a 255. In addition he rolled games of 219 and 177 for a total of 651. Mc- Kerty's plnwork for an average of 203 featured for the winners. Scores: J. C.

PENNEY CO. Morgan 177 171 528 Burch 124 162 454 Small 186 179 530 178 176 513 Koepsell 210 182 875 870 842 2587 RECREATIONS Reed 196 205 558 Hess 191 126 486 Pell 173 183 491 Snyder 130 136 419 Da tan is 203 172 557 893 822 796 2521 ELIASOHN MARKET Eliasohn 189 166 531 Masse 167 125 444 Hansen 140 140 420 BOI-R 181 154 524 McKerty 175 212 609 852 797 879 2528 CRANE SERVICE Doakes 140 140 420 Harvey 168 174 478 Anderson 140 184 488 Cmne 14tO 140 420 Rasmussen 177 255 651 765 893 799 2457 Lost Your Latch Key? Call Fire Department MEMPHIS, Dec. do not concern themselves entirely with putting out fires. Official reports of the Memphis fire department mentioned the following "rescues" that had nothing to do with blazes: girls locked in pantry." "Released man locked in on third floor." "Party locked out of apartment. Let in one on second floor." "Lady locked out.

Let her in. Luring Lights Blue and Green Found to Bend Plants Most WASHINGTON, Dec. blue and green colored parts of sunlight are those that play the chief part in making a plant bend in any direction says the annual report of the Smithsonian Institution. It was foumt that green light is 1,000 times more active than yellow light in causing a plant to bend, and blue light is 30 times more active than green. Red and infra-red or "invisible red" light do not cause any bending.

The bending effect of different colors of light was measured by growing an oat sprout her tween two lights of different colors. If the sprout started to bend toward one light, intensity of the other was increased so that the sprout was kept growing straight upward. The increase needed in tha intensity of one light to offset the bending of the plant toward the other right showed how much more of a "bender" one color was than another. notice and Chiang himself will quiz the colonels and generals. Dissatisfied with progress the campaign against communists in Kiangsl province, Chiang also ruled that any soldier guilty of negligence would be subject to any penalty the generalissimo might ses fit to inflict.

Turkish Co-Ed Enters Michigan ISTANBUL, Dec. America has a striking example of Mustapha Kemal's emancipa- tidn of Turkish women in 20- year-old Faize Shevket. She is the only co-ed in the Freshman class of the engineering school of the University ol Michigan and plans to become Turkey's first woman chemical engineer. Her uncle Bedi Bey was formerly councillor of the Turkish embassy at Washington. Her sister Fazile Shevket is an assistant professor at Istanbul university.

Their father was formerly governor of Baghdad. CHIANG QUIZZES GENERALS IN ARMY EFFICIENCY TEST SHANGHAI, Dec. Chiang Kai-Shek, nationalist China's generalissimo, in an attempt to raise- the efficiency of his armies has announced examinations in military science for all officers. Those bedow the rank of colonel are to be tested at stated intervals. Higher officers are subject to examination without AUCTION SALE Friday, January 5, 1934 Sale will be called at one o'clock sharp.

and a quarter miles west of Victory Town Hall. LIVESTOCK: 17 Holstein Cows, coming fresh, dates to be furnished at time of sale. Jersey and Guernsey Cows, coming; fresh, dates to be furnished at time of sale. 8 Two-year Old Holstein Heifers. Number of Holstein Calves.

1 Two-year Old Thoroughbred Holstein Bull. 2 One and a half year old Holstein Bulls. 3 Brood Sows, and small pigs four weeks old, and number of other Pigs. IMPLEMENTS: Pump Rake. Side-Delivery Rake.

Walking Cultivator. Three-section Drag. Corn Binder. Wagon. Stump Wagon.

Logging Sleighs. Horse Corn Planter. Walking Plow. Many other articles too numerous to mention. TERMS OF goods to be settled for before removed from the premises.

Six months time will be given on notes approved by clerk of sale and proprietors. Peter Loxen Estate, Ludington State Bank and T. H. Fisher, Administrators, And Julius Loxen, Proprietor. CHARLES SPULLER, Auctioneer, I.

J. EDDY, Clerk. Dec. 28, Jan. 2.

BUI Paid After 36 Years DEL RIO, Judge C. D. Smith, who formerly practiced medicine, recently was paid the $2 balance due on a bill for services rendered in 1897. Mrs. Bertha M.

Gray claims she has never missed voting in 40 years. The ballot box has been installed in her front room in Salt Lake City, Utah, at every election during the past two decades. WASHINGTON, Dec. 28. Before many years nave passed American manufacturers may be independent of the monopoly which China has long held in the tung oil industry.

About 30,000 acres of tung trees now are thriving in the southern states. Some experts aver it would take only slightly more than three times as many acres of producing trees to make America independent of the Oriental product. Tung oil, sometimes called hinese wood oil, is extracted from seeds of the tung tree of Central and Western China. It almost unknown in its natural state to the average layman )Ut, being a good mixer, it hides many products with which IB frequently comes in contact, says a bulletin from Waterprdofing Material Long before wesberiv shipoing navigated the Yangtze river, Chinese rivermen waterproofed their boat timbers by'saturating them with tung oil. They also burned the oil in lamps, accumulated tung oil soot to make India ink, and with carbon from burned seed pulp and other materials made a calking compound.

From the Chinese success in waterproofing silk with tune; oil. Westerners learned that other fabrics could be rendered waterproof in the same manner. Now tung oil is widely used bv manufacturers of raincoats, bHh curtains and oil cloth. Wall board manufacturers have discovered that the oil mnkes a good binder, while manufacturers of linoleum st.e'am wire insulation and automobile enamels also have become customers of Chinese tung oil producers. The first tung seeds from China were planted in the 1 United States bv the department of agriculture in 1905 at Chic.o.

Calif. A year later, the resulting seedlings were sent to experimental station's through the southern and Pacific coast regions. They thrived in.por- Florida, California, Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi where frost is not sufficiently severe to nip the trees' sensitive blossoms. Tung trees grow to about, 25 feet in height. With their white to pinkish blossoms in the spring they resemble apple trees.

The tung fruit is about the size of a small apple. Its five 1 seeds are no larger than BE SCIENTIFIC! Ifadettlatk Reglatdred tJ. 8. Patent ASTRONOMERS' ARE COINS OFF Aluminum is iaJtinfitfpJa.ee on Ayes because, it sets more, fa? utiifbrtn rtflectton, dMff not temish, is SAYS PROF. JOHN D.

STRONG, Ml. Wilson Obsetvahoy LAR6EST TELESCOPE IN THE WORLD WHAT AW YOU WORRYING ABOUT? KIND OP LUCK A GUY WOULD HAV6 IF HG MOKE THE MIRROR THAT robbins' eggs. In China the trees grow wild, but in this country growers have operated their plantations with the modern system of an American orchardist. When the' tung fruit ripens in the fall it drops to the ground. In China the hulls are stripped from the seeds by hand; in this country hulling is done by machinery.

Gainesville, has a tung oil pressing-plant. Near Railroads, Highways America's tung oil plantations are near railroads and. modern different from the forests where tung trees thrive in China for there are neither roads nor railroads. To reach the Chinese trees one must penetrate the remote mountain valleys of Human and Szechwan provinces. The oil is carried on human backs to the nearest river shipping point in light bamboo baskets lined with 16 thick- nesses of waterproofed paper.

Before it reaches the sea, most tung oil shoots the rapids of the Yangtze gorges. Iner Seattle engineer who laid out the city's airport won his pilot's license five years later. Sea Raider's Bell Traced to States By Sydney Sleuths SYDNEY, Australia, Dec. here say that have solved the mystery of the bell on the famous Ger- man cruiser Emden which dis- appeared twice within 18 months. A young German, believed to be a deserter from the French foreign legion, has been arrested in connection with the second theft of the bell last Anril.

It now is said that the tocsin was smuggled on board the American steamer Mariposa, bound for San Francisco, and there sold to a German-American for $20,000. The bell was salvaged from the Emden after she had been sunk by the Australian ship Sydney at Cocos Island in 1914. For years it was displayed in the Garden Island naval depot. First stolen last year, it was found 'buried in Hyde Park, Sydney, and was taken to the war museum for greater safety, but, it disappeared again, on April 26. we; -KUf UP WHEN Jack climbed the beanstalk, he got a new of his needs.

No longer would just a hen do, but a golden-egg hen. No longer just a harp, but one that stood by itself and played. He didn't know what he wanted till he saw something better than what he had though he labored hand over hand to get hold of that point of view. Advertisements give you a high point of view without any climbing at all. They spread world products before to serve you, conveniences to low because so many thousands are using the same.

They give you a new conception of what you'd like to own. No longer will a watch or food chopper the most highly improved watch or food chopper. No longer just a one of purest transmission. They make you change your mind about what you started to choose, and choose something more pleasing at no higher price. They help you see the whole field of satisfying wares.

They lift you to fresh joys. READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS HONEST FACTS ARE IN THEIR NEWS mj.v "WH 15. TV I Ludington Daily News.

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About The Ludington Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
95,345
Years Available:
1930-1977