Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 277, Decatur, Adams County, 22 November 1930 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Yellow Jackets Give New Haven 21-16 Trimminl

EARLY LEAD IS TOO MUCH FOR VISITING TEAM Curtismen Show Punch In First Quarter To Get 12-0 Lead Bursting forth in the first ouarter with a fast offensive Decatur high school Yellow .Markets piled up an early lead on New Haven high school Bull Dogs and managed to hold it through the game to win. 21-16 at Decatur high school gymnasium Friday night. In fir preliminary games Decatur Seconds trimmed the New Haven seconds. 24-11 and the New Haven girls edged out the Deca-1 tur girls led by Macklin and Brandyberry to win 17-16, in one of the most exciting girls games playtd in Decatur for several years. In the main go, Schnepp and Debolt led the early-minute offense, which spelled defeat for the visiting Hull Dogs. The Yellow Jackets started early and witli an airtight d tense supporting the forward march ths Curtismen ran up a 12-0 score at the end of the first 8 minute period. Coach Curtis chose to start Jake Hill, and Snedeker at forward positi ns; Schnepp at center and Debolt and Zerkle at guards. Th? combination worked good together and it was only a few seconds until the ball was hurrying through the hoop. In the second quarter the Bull Dug i ffense got started, after the Jackets had made the score 14-0. New Haven changed its attack, and guarded man for man instead of the zone plan of earlier in the game. The big Allen county guards kept the Decatur forwards well covered and the scoring was done largely by Debolt and Schnepp. The half ended. 14-6. with Decatur on the big side. Ccach Paul White, New Haven net mentor evidently gave his players th needle between halves because they came out with a grim d<--ternf nation which at times played the Curtismen to a standstill. The visitors were dogged on their man-for-man guarding game and the Jackets resorted. In the second half Coach Curtis tiied two other forwards and a guard. Coffee went in for Snedeker and played a good game and was later replaced by Buffenbarger who looked fine, also. Steele went in for Debolt for a period during the second half and did some great defens work. In the final quarter New Haven attempted a closing rally which for. a time looked like a landslide. The Decatur defense tightened however and the last three minutes was devoted ton stalling game, which did it't get a 100 per cent, approval of the fans, but which was perfectly manipulated. The final count was 21-16. Bruff Cleary in his usual manner kept the game well under control with the aid of Davis, umpire. The second team game was a workout for a dozen or more'Decatur high school “comers” and the fact that Decatur won easily showed Coach Curtis that he had plenty of material for several years. The girls game turned out to be a thriller with even the fans opposed to girls games chewing their finger nails and yelling. New Haven had led during most cf the game, but through the passing of Brandy berry and the shooting ability of Ruth Macklin, Decatur climb-

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ed up to within a point of th? visitors. Just ns the game ended a New Haven foul gave Macklin a chance from the free throw line. The slut was missed and New Haven won 17-16. The Decatur line I up Included, Wlnnes and Anderson lat guard posts; Schraluka ut rentier; M. M. Coverdale at side-center hind Brandyberry, Macklin and i Shady at forward positions. Coach Curtis used Ogg, Heller, Baumgartner, Brown, Strickler, I Ehlngi r, Harmon. Rush, Blythe, ; Engle, Cowan, Odle, Saunders and Baker in the s- cond team game. ! Yellow Jackets (21) FG FT TP Hill. f. 0 2 2' .htcenbatger, f. 11 3! 1 Snedeker, f. <> II 0 . Cocee, f. 0 0 111 ' Schnepp. c. 4 0 8 Z rkel. g. 1 <> 2' I Debolt, g. 3 <• 6 Steele, g. 0 0 0. Totals 9 3 21J New Haven (16) FG FT TP I Bolyard, f 2 0 4 Moberly, f. 0 6 6 I i Moser, c. 11 31 Roemer, g. 0 0 01 Tustison. g. 11 31 Hoetzer, g. 0 0 0 Totals 4 8 161 Referee, Cleary. Fort Wayne; Umpire, Davis, Fort Wayne. Score at half: Decatur. 14; New Haven, 6. c KIRKLAND IN 26-19 VICTORY Kirkland towneh-p high school Kangaroos ran wild against Rockl Creek basketball team of Wells county and finished on the big end of a 26-19 count. Dettinger, veteran Kirkland center was the big cog in the well-oiled Kirkland machine and he accounted for 9 of his team’s points. In the preliminary game Kirkland seconds dropped a game to Rock Creek seconds 25-20. The main go was interesting from a spectator’s standpoint, and while Kirkland had the upper hand most of the time, the Wells county team was always threatening to wipe out the lead. Lineup and summary; Kirkland (26) F.G. FT. T.P. McKane. f 3 0 6 Egly. f 2 <> 4 Dettinger, e 4 19 Zimmerman, g .... 2 1 5 Boerne, g 0 0 0 Schladen. g . .. 1 0 2 Adler, g 0 0 0 Totals 12 2 26 Rock Creek (191 Miller, f 3 4 10 Creek, f 11 3 McAfeie, f 0 11 Harnish, c . ... 11 3 Buckley, g 0 11 Graham, g . 0 11 Totals 5 9 19 Referee: Beal, Decatur. LOUGHRAN IS EASY WINNER Chicago, Nov. 22- (U.R) —Tommy ! Loughran of Philadelphia, former light-heavyweight champion, won a decisive vitory over King Levinsky young Chicago heavywight, by outpointing Ism in a 10-round bout last night in the Chicago stadium. A crowd of 14.428 paid approximately $39,092.56 to see the bout. Loughran weighed 182’4, Levinsky 180%. Loughran jabbed and cuffed the awkward Levtinsky around the ring, and won nine rounds, with one even. There were no knockdowns, although Loughran was pushed down in a wild scramble In the second round Loughran, bounding off the ropes, pushed Levinsky down, but the latter did not take a count. It was the first defeat for Levinsky since he rose to prominence by scoring a knockout over Leo Lomski of Aberdeen, Wash., several months ago. In the 10-round semifinal, Barney Ross and Harry Dublinsky, Chicago lightweights, fought a draw. Ross weighed 13214, Dublinsky 133%. 0 _ Venezuela to Celebrate New Orleans, —(UP) The 100th anniversary of the death of General Simon Bolivar, national hero of Venezuela will be celebrated on December 17 and New Orleans will join in this celebration. This anniversary will be marked by the payment of Venezuela of the last cent of its national debt. In 1908 $50,000,000 we owed by the country and the payment of the balance this year will make Venezuela the only Latin-American country with no national debt. —- - — n- —. ' German Engines to China Berlin, — (UP) — Twenty heavy freight locomotives have just been sent from Hamburg to China. The same ship is also carrying 50 freight cars made in Germany for Egypt.

MC LARNIN IS BADLY BEATEN — New York, Nov. 22 (U.R) Billy I Petrolic. usually subtitled "The 1 Fargo Express, ’’ today sat on the 1 right side of Tony Canzonerl, king lof the lightweights. • Petrolle earned his title as crown prince of this currently popular class by scoring an Impressively convincing 10-round decision) over Jimmy McLarnin, courageous, two-fisted welterweight of Vancouver, 8.C., and California. McLarnin offered as an excuse 1 that he had broken his right band early in the bout. The fight was the best seen in New York this season as well as the Moodiest. The drama of the fight began in I the first round when Petrolle opened a two-fisted attack which, nearly floored the Vancouver boy.: I Aga n in the second Jimmy was • nearly floored but, glassy-eyed, he fought on and stayed upright. McLarnin was down twice for | counts of nine in the fourth. | The United Press score sheet ■ gave Petrolle all of the rounds except the ninth which McLarnin won and the third and fifth widen were even. —o High School Basketball Logansport 39; Manual (Indianapolis) 19. v Royal Center 25; Peru 24. Fulton 3,8; Mexico 22« Winamac 27; Kewanna 19. Idaville 36; Monticello 12. Culver 22; Rochester 15. Frankfort 27; Muncie 22. Brainbridge 18; Rockville 16. Bedford 34; Orleans 14. Pendleton 22; Markleville 13. Edinburg 18; Milroy 12. Paragon 22; Ellettsville 14. Monrovia 33; Eminence 5. Connersville 22; Columbus 17. Amo 35;’ Clayton 22. Wa.nut Grove 20; Westfield 15. Knightstown 22; Rushville 21. Washington 22; Martinsville 19. Newcastle 19; Hagerstown 15 Franl lin 28; Scottsburgh 24. Auburn 34: Angola 11. Portland 31; Ft Recovery 19. Huntington 41; North Manchestar 11. Ken 'a lville ’IS; Michigan City 11

GOVERNMENT LACKS POWER CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE' centrate is produced by this cooperative organization, which is being aided by federal farm board loans. Woodcock explained that even 'if the government decided to prosecute all such cases —despite the St. Louis raid th.re has been no indication that such a bi ai d attitudewould be assumed —federal prosecutois would be unable to employ the stringent Jones law. Th s law, Woodcock pointed out, provides cnly for increased sentences for manufactur:. sale, transportation, importation and exportation ot’ intoxicants. Since the grape product first was 'ntroduced in Milwaukee only action taken by officials here was when Woodcock describ'd as "perfectly correct" the raid of St. Louis federal agents on tlie store of one Max Rader. According to Woodcock. the only recourse of the fed?:al government in such a case is section 18 of tjte Volstead act which provides: “It shall be unlawful to advertise, manufacture, s 11 or possess for sale any utensil, contrivance, machine, preparation, compound, tablet, substance, formula, direc tion or recip? advertised, designed or intended for use in th unla wfui manufacture of intoxicating liquor.” In section 25 it is stated tliat in states where a special p nalty is not provided the fine shall not be more than SSOO. Meanwhile, dry leaders here opened their attack on the grape concentrate. termed by Dr. Clarence True Wilson of the Mathodist Board of Temperance and Public Morals, "mor? dangerous to the success of prohibition titan any evolved since tlie Eighteenth amendment." Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandl, former ass'stant attorney general in cha:ge of prohibition enforcem nt, now counsel for fruit industries, would make no rejcinder to Dr. Wilson’s statement that “a very shrewd lawyer put a deal over on us." "My attitude,” Mr. Willebrandl said, "is the same as it has been for the last year and a half. I will not conduct private law In the press.” Co-eds Study Pharmacy Ppllman. Wash.. -(UP)—A brisk demand for feminine p'tarmists has caused the school of pharmacy at Washington State College to scan its enrollment list for near-grad-uates among the few co-eds entering into the newest field for women endeavors. Women graduates find little difficulty securing positions as soon as they finish school.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1930.

IMSKEW-VL °H. rWwta Now Haven always Is tough for 'the Curtismen. Tile Yellow Jackets showed some >good pois in the game lust night, but at linn s they showed "room for i improvement." The Bull Dogs have a good combination and will win a lot ot bassetbail games this season. The game was no set-up and the first quarter lead was just too much. A little unpleasant incident oc-j j cnrre.l ai the game when a rooter | from Woodbui a by the name of | I Moser became unruly. He was eject-1 I :-d rom tlie game during the first ' half, but showed that somewhere along the line he was a gentleman by coming bat k in the second halt' land a ting like the rest of the spec- | tutors. The crowd was unruly at times and the officials received s me boos, who aren't swallowed by unbiased spectators very well. The officials, Cleary and Davis I held the game in tonirol, and while I at times it was hard-fought, it never I became rough. The girls game was a dandy. I Jeanette Clark has a squad of real :iil athletes. The forward combination of Ruth Macklin and Sally Brandyberry is good enough for any G'.eenwich Vil tge chorus. The r-cond team game which Carted at 6:30, and which disappointed many fans who thought it would start at 7:30 was a display of what Decatur w.ll have in jears to come There are a bunch of freshmen t De. atur high school who will j make it tough on the regulars be-1 ore the season is over. The crowd was one of the la ge t of the last two years— | There were about 103 fans from N w Haven and half that many from Berne, and ore from Woodburn, Auburn trimmed Angola last light and the ( urtismen meet Au>urn next Wednesday night. Those vho saw the Auburn team play say ■e Wednesday night game will be i dandy. Then next Friday Decatur entertains its old county rival down near ths en-gate, Berne high school Bears. in the meantime. Coach George Laurent takes his Catholic high chool Commodores to Fort Wayne onight for a, battle with Concorlia. The Lauientmen are showing a ot o improvement in every game and have an excellent chance of winning tonight against a much heavier opponent. Ed Liechty, one of the chief “huggers” for the Berne Bears is warn ng the folks downt here this week that the DecaturBerne game is next Friday night. Cba'h Sonny Johnson had his -.quad here last night for the game, ird the Bears are a likely lookng bunch of athletes, which may ause Decatur plenty of trouble. Kirkland beat New Haven at few Haven by six points; Berne beat Kirkland at Berne five points; Figure that out. COMMODORES. BEAT CONCORDIA. Huntington Vikings trimmed North Manchester 44-11 in the Kreigbaum oi ening at Huntington last night. Kendallville disposed of Michigan City 38-11. • In fact almost all of the Decatur’s rivals won handily, so it means there will be a lot of good net games here this season. Hoagland was represented at the basketball game by its chief gunman last night—which incidentally reminds us that Jack Diamond, New York gangster who was shot recently had a red-headed girl. Those two' facts have no’hing much in common I but we happened to think of them both at the same time. Charley Knapp’s Purdue Boilermaker meet the down trodden

Indiana University gridmen this afternoon. Os course it’s impossible Charley but that's what they said about the election las November. COMMODORES. BEAT CONCORDIA. _— .... <>--- — — Pupils Learn Saving Mhntiv. N. Y U.F I Pupils of Grammar School 16 deposit an av- 1 rag” of more than s3<»o a week in: ; Albany banks through a system I managed solely by themselves. | i uu students collect di posits each ' Thursday and record the amounts 1 n books. A bank representative | then collects the tola!. An aggregate of $8,318.21 was saved last i , year. STORY OF MAN TO BE TRACED AT CHICAGO FAIR Reproduction of Maya Temple One of Feature Exhibits UP Staff Correspondent Chicago. Nov. 22 — (UP) — The | mounds, ruins, tempies, r iigious | ! i j symbols and otfte.r traces of cultural attainment comprise the language in which the archaeologist , and anthropologist read the story I' of the progress of human culture. ( While the Chicago World’s Fair , In 1933 will have as its central , tlr me the conquests of A Centuiy , ot Progress made possible by , scientific achievements in transticrtation, the telephone and radio. ( lighting, machine of production.;, medicine and education, back of all this Is the story of Man himself. Tbs is the them? of the ' anthropological exhibit. Tw Ive acres have been reserved for the stoiy of man's culture cn American scil. j Regional Dlfferenc = s Social organization, ceremonial ' life and artistic ideas show the j same regional differences, and if ! , man’s body Is studied it becomes ( apparent that physical type like- , s -ho. s variations, according to ( Dr. Faye-Copper Cde. professor of ] anthropology at the University of! Chicago. When the American Indian cul- . tures are plotted on the map they fall into nine distinct culture areas north of Mexico. Tiles? range from the primitive hunting groups to settled agriculturists. in connection with these groupings the Anthropological Exposition is designed to answer ques- ‘ tions concerning the relation of . ulture to environm nt, the effect of t ade, warfare, inter marriage and m’grations on institutions and physical .types. In the allotted space the separate groups will be arranged in ' geographical relation to one another, and with native Indians and Eskimo present to depict their daily life and tribal customs. These 1 groups include besides the Eskimo, i the California Indians of the North-' west coast, the Blackfoot hunters: of the great plains, th? Pueblo! builders and the nomadic Navajoes. I expert horsemen and sheep herd- j ers. Greatest Achievement “Finally," says Dr. Cole, “com s ihe greatest achievement of early r man in America —a great Maya; temple. On a huge terrace overooking the surreunding territory vill be an exact reproduction of j lie four buildings comprising the! famous nunnery at Uxmal in Yucatan." i Within the temple will be ex- ■ hibits depicting the life of man I from the etnbroy to adult life. Here ! the visitor will see the races of JI man, the effects cf race crossing,; problems of growth and other more technical subjects. Here also will appear a section of one of the great prehistoric of France,' so excavated that the growth cf human culture and the changes n man’s body can be traced over a period of 50,000 years. Women Play Polo Pinehurst, N. C. —(UP) — The ‘irst women’s polo team qf Pinehurst will be composed of Mrs. Richard S. Tuffts, Pinehurst, formerly of Glen Cove, L. I.; Mrs. Beatrice Edwards, New York; Mrs.! Beverly Walters, Washington, and Miss K. Julia Scott Butterfield, Battle Creek, Mich., Coach W. Vivian Slocock plans to schedule a series of games for the Pinehurst women with the Ashville women’s polo team. o Spelling Substituted Copenhagen, —(UP) — Echoes of the Rhineland Occupation were heard at the recent European Railway Conference here. Frenchmen j prepared the agenda for negotiations regarding the North Express route from Paris to Cologne. Germans crossed out the word "Cologne’’ and substituted the German spelling—‘‘Koln.’ I

STRITCH MADE ARCHBISHOP IN COLORFUL SCENE Milwaukee Diocese Enthrones Young Prelate With Ceremonies Milwaukee Nov. 22 —(UP) Col-1 jOrful ceremonies, centuries old, i marked the -nthrenoment he-o to-1 -v of the Most Rev. Samuel Alpbonsus Stritch as archbishop of| jthe Milwaukee d'oeese. ' Prominent -Catholic clergymen I from the United States attended I the s rvices with Gerrge Cardinal: Mundelein, archbishop of Chicago' acting as presiding prelate at the 1 I solemn pontificial high mass at St. j John’s cathedral. The mass was sung by the Rt. Rev. Paul I’. Rohde. | bishop of Green Bay. The papal ! bull, which appointed Archbishop I Stritch to the offlc°. was lead by I tlie Rev. Georg ? R. Raddant. secretary of the’Milwaukee archdiccese. The new archbishop, who is 43, |is the youngest of the 14 archbishops in America. He was born in Nashville, Tenn., Aug. 17. 1887. j his father having com - from Coun-1 ty Ken y, Ireland. His mother was i a Kentuckian. Following h's graduation from! St. Gregc ry College. Cincinnati. 0., | in 1904. he was selected to attend' the American College at Rome where be studied for six years. Because of his extreme youth, a | special dispensation was required when he was ordained a pri st in 1910. He served as pastor of churches in Memphis and Nashvll from 1910 to 1915 and in May. 1921. was made a domestic prelate and a few months later became the youngest bisln p in the country, succeeding Bishop Schrembs at Toledo. He was then 34. Archbishop Stritch’s accomplishments in Toledo include the establishment df seven new parishes, 1 the construction of a million dollar Catholic high schcol and the launching of th? new cathedral of Our Lady, Queen of the Holy Rosary, whose lofty campanile will rise to a height of 250 feet, dominating a’l the country around. The cathedral, costing more than sl,-

f W'fe'® B Santa Claus j j will be in Decatur next Saturday all day with his Reindeer, Eskimos, and Indian, to help Decatur Merchants open the Christmas Season ONLY Five More Weeks until CHRISTMAS and with this glorious Holiday comes the customary tradition oi Gift Giving. Decatur Stores wi'l open the Christmas Buying gram on this day with stores full of .beautiful attractive Gift Items and invite you to visit their stoies and inspect their wares. Shop early this Christmas by starting next Satin and through the columns of the Democrat. M eune>day’s issue will contain hundreds of Christmas sugg ’ tions from the local merchants. Watch for it.

I 006,000. will be cimplcted and dedijcaled during Christmas week. o— BANKS’ CRISIS BELIEVED OVER (CONTINUED FROM PAf’k ONE) jof larger Institutions. In most ; cases, the* were brought I about by the failure ot two largo hanks at Quincy, 111., with which the smaller lainks in neighboring communities were affiliated or In which they had deposits. Among tlie new additions to the i Ik-t yesterday were four banks in southern Indiana; three in North 1 Carolina at Asheville, Bryson and Hazel; the Bank of Cruet wood and I the Hopkins County Bank in Kentucky; Tennessee institutions at Paris. Nashville and Lenoir City; and the Cleburne, Kan., state bank. In Arkansas, where more than : 50 of the closed banks are located, ' assurance was given by leading financiers earlier in tlie week that most of the institutions would reopen as soon as boards of directors were given assurance that runs

Public Sale 1 I will offer for stile at pub’ic auction at niv resktaJi 1 mile west of Pleasant Mills, 51 4 miles soiitlwv.st ..rn”?! on Salem road, al 1 o’clock p. m.„ on I TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1930 I The following property: CATTLE One Guernsey cow, 5 years oal. eligible k register, giving good flow of milk, will freshen Feb 1 Guernsey, 1 fears old. will freshen Feb. 11; 1 GuenaJ heifer, of registered sire and dam. will freshen in December 1 Veal Calf, I weeks old. One Good Work Horse. One pen Plymouth Rott Homer Pigeons. 5(1 head of Narragansc-tt Turkeys, and young slock. One 10-month old Shepherd dog. One Light Wagon; one Light Disk; one 75-eggincie hater. Miscellaneous articles. TERMS OF SALE All sums of $5 and under, cash. Over $5 a bankable note for 4 months without interest. G off for cash. No property removed until settled for. R. J. MANN Harry Daniels, auctioneer.

Cl The I W.ll sing U serins us ’ th- annual I’ni t g ??| ■"hutch ho In ... l()nii SI I he Hingers save they «lw a *x3 tavorable com ini , M ” Jr> » J „ Forgot tc Uge I Vancouver. Wash. 1 file department w aK ... M meeting on lhp sw , )lh , local engine house. a '”3 •K>le t<> Sim,, down lhp I Sot to take hold 0 ( lu±7 iH the f], )Cl r i, e | ow *1 Baked Hedgehog SeL Mansfield (NoftinXoJj Efland (UP) Raked was servml at the a llllua i J the Swainmote society ~2*l formed to keep alive o!.| ainl trailitioDß, Get the Habit—Trad; Jt