Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 59, Decatur, Adams County, 10 March 1931 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

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SCHEDULES FOR ALL REGIONALS Jndianapolls. Mar. 10. U.R Bik*tball attention in Indiana . >.!u. was fixed upon the r,| high shoo) reams preparing for the regional round of the annual state tourna wont to t>e played Saturday. Those fit teams are the sole :.■ vfvots of sectional play last F, i day and Saturday in which 7 0 schools competed. Games this week will be played by 16 cities with four teams assigned to each center In each plan ■. two first-round games will be play ed Saturday afternoon, with th.winners meeting in the final game in the evening. Thus the field will be cut once more, this time to 16 teams which will meet at the Bullet fieldhouse, March 20, and 21. in the final games of the tournament. One cf the most interesting games, ami one that is likely to be of great impoitance in the circle of championship contenders, will ue played in the Muncie sectional between Muncie and Newcastle. The winner assuredly will be a dangerous foe in the finals. All eyes will be upon Alexandria, the team that stopped Anderson in a triple overtime game, and Columbus, victor over Shelbyville. The teal strength of Stendal, the southern India a team with a has no . gymnasium cf its own. will be test- i ed in a game with Washington, the present champion. Just which 16 teams will earn chances in the final games it is! impossible to predict, but it is certain that they will not be the 16 strongesi. since several outstanding teams already have fallen by the wayside, and in way of the regional* there appear to be no heavy bidders for the crown. Schedules for the Saturday re-i

/~x’ L sj & j aki a Just a block or two from z V\ everywhere -one and one- : -1, A half blocks from Union / \ X ' Station and two blocks i from Traction Terminal 1 4 AIL OUTSIDE ROOMS L’ : .- < f AND LACU WITH BA T LI Ww I E f > pates i r r r ' X>.ouo'e ,nQ.« rr ■ GAOAGE: SEPVICE APTULiD ZINK ST Doctor "’F. ’< ■ I "1 lit 5 I 3 i I?' 'ls V «9i 36 1 I STOP? I LOOK! Order “Decatur Quality Chicks” AT OUR NE\t LOW PRICES FOR MARCH AND APRIL. Place your order now. Everything points towards high poultry and egg markets next fall and winter. PerlOO Per 500 Per 1000 English White Leghorns SB.OO $37.50 $70.00 Heavy Breeds 9.00 42.50 80.00 Heavy Mixed 8.00 37.50 70.00 On hand started chicks, one to two weeks old I at a bargain. Early chicks for extra profits. LThe Decatur Hatchery Decatur, Ind. Phone 497

; tonal games are: At Anderson I’. M 2 Danville vs. Short ridge (Indianapolis. i 3 Tipton vs. Alexandria. At Bedford 2 (' rydon vs. Brownstown. 3 Paoli vs. Mitchell. At Auburn 2 Mentone vs. Lima. 3 Kendallville vs. Auburn. At Bloomington 2 day city vs. Martinsville. 3- Switz City vs. Wiley (Terre Hamel. At Columbus 2— Vevay vs. Greensburg. 3 Franklin vs. Columbus. At Evansville 2 Tell City vs. Tennyson. 3 Owensville vs. Central (Evansville.. At Fort Wayne 2 North Side (Fort Wayne I vs. Bluffton. 3 Decatur vs. Huntington. At Marion 2 Wabash vs. Kokomo. 3 Mai ion vs. Hartford City. At Muncie 2 Newcastle vs. Muncie. 3 t’nion City vs. Wilkinscn. At Rochester 2 Central (Smith Bend. vs. Culver. 3 Winamac vs. Elkhart. At Greencastle 2 Wingate vs. Greencastle. 3- Clinton vs. Veddersburg. At Lafayette 2 Boswell vs. Frankfort. 3— Lebanon vs. Jefferson (Lafayette I. At Logansport 2- Brookston vs. Logansport. 3— Peru vs. Delphi. As Rushville 2- Connersville vs. Richmond. 3 Rushville vs. Lawrencebyrg. At Valparaiso 2 Horace Mann (Gary) vs. Brook. 3— Valparaiso vs. Laporte. At Vincennes 2—Washington vs. Stendal.

3 Viner tines vs. I’nion. I P. M. ST. JOE WINS CITY SERIES The St. Joe eighth grade team won the Decatur city championship I ‘ Monday night by defeating the , t , Central eighth graders in the third 'and deciding game of the city 1 series at D. H. S. gym, 11 to 8. Neither team displayed as good ball as they had played in the othjer games of the series but the fair, | number of fans present got quite a kick out of the ball game just i the same. The Central team never held the . lead, although the score was tied '[at the end of the first quarter, 2-2. ! St. Joe led at the half. 5 3 and at the end of the third quarter. 11-8. Central failed to score in the fourth; quarter while St. Joe scored three I points in this period. Bentz and Murphy, St. Joe forI wards, led the scoring for their team with four points each. HolI lopeter and Butler did all the 'point-getting tor Central, with four points each. Lineup and summary:* St. Joe (14) FG FT TP Murphy, f. 12 4 ! Bentz, f. 2 0 4| Braden, c. 10 2Lose, g. Olli :K. Colchin, g. . 0 (I (I ■ ■ B. Colchin. g. 0 11 l Hess, g. 1 o 2 J Tomis 5- 4 14 Central (8) FG FT TP i Peter son, f. 0 0 o | - Hoffman, f. 0 0 0 i Hollopeter. <-. I 2 4, Butler, g. 2 0 4, i Harkless. g. ... 0 o o I Jackson, f. 0 0 ol i Myers, f. 0 0 (• ( ! i Totals 3 2 S| THREE ARE TIED FOR RUNNER-UP Chicago. Mor. 10.—dIP)—The end of the Bir Ten basketball season jott ( r oo teams — Purdue. Mlnne-' snta and Michigan—deadlocked for' | the rnnn“r.up position tn the' ohampidfiship Northwestern quintet. In the two final games of the season last night. Michigan defeat-j ed Chicago 29-1". and Minnesota; won from Ohio State. 31-24. Northwestern, which won the|' - championshin, finished its season ' last week with 11 victories and 1 ' defeat. Purdue. Minnesota and.*’ Michigan each won eight -games p land lost four. Daniels, center who was picked, ’ on the United Press all-conference ’ I team by the Big Ten coaches, was " 'elected captain of the Michigan * jteam for next season after last 1 jnight’s game. He led his team ini" scoring in the final game with 101 I points. Final standing follows: W L Pct Pts OP ■' • Northwestern 11 1 .919 396 281 * , Purdue 8 4 .667 353 27-5 i’ . Minnesota 8 4 .667 353 329 1 I Michigan 8 4 .667 322 255 i * I Illinois . .. 7 5 .583 343 299 ' I Indiana 5 7 .417 300 325 I Wisconsin 4 8 .333 240 294 l ■ Chicago 4 8 .333 329 377 I Ohio State 3 9 .250 281 318 j' lowa 2 10 .167 232 367 j' Last Night's Results i Michigan. 29: Chicago, 15. Minnesota, 31; Ohio State, 21. • o Yale Library Believed To Be World’s Largest — New Haven, Conn., Mar. 10. <U.R) , —Yale University library now has t -a total cf 1,983.338 volumes and is ( , believed to be the largest univers- | ity library in the world, according . to a report by Professor Andrew ( t Keogh, librarian. >i i Tli® books have just been housed - in the Sterling Memorial library. 1 which towers more tha nthe equiv-p alerj of 16 stories above the other p campus structures. ( Among the 61,407 new volumes 11 added last year was the James ‘ I Camp Williams copy of the Tacitus 1 1 opera, printed at Venice about < '1473. * Co'd weather is coming. Liquid air. 312 degrees below wo. Hivh school auditor- f turn. Wednesday night, 18:15 p. ni. 1 . o ' 35 head of Horses; 20 head t of cattle; brood sows; and feeding hogs; poultry; farm n’achinerv; at DECATUR « COMMUNITY SALE. March ’ 11, 1931 at 10:00 A. M. «

DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT TLF.SDAY, MARCH 10. 1931

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By HARRISON CARROLL. Copvtlfhl. HHH. Hreiuier Syn'lcai), Ire. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., March 00. —ls Paramount can close a deal for the talkie rights, "Tom Saw-

yer, Detective,” will be made this Summer in Hollywood. Though lesser known than "Tom Sawyer” or "Huc k 1 e- - Finn,” the Twain sequel is said to provide good picture material. In case it is made, the leading roles will be taken, of course.

F®4i/ Mitzi Green.

by Jackie Coogan, Mitzie Green and Jackie Searles. JCihn Cromwell will direct. “Tom Sawyer” has turned out to be one of Paramount’s big money pictures of the year. Also it has brought Jackie Coogan back as a star. And, of more far-reaching effect, it has turned all Hollywood to the task o*' winning back its most loyal audience, the children of the land AND HE SENT IT COLLECT. Solly Violinsky, the scenarist, recently got a bill from the Lambs’ Club in New York. He wired back: "Got your bill that 1 owed you $lB6 stop send me sl4 and I’ll owe you an even S2OO. Don’t stop.” Marx Brothers migrate. Teet Carle reports the four Marx Brothers— Harpo, mighsy pantominrist; Chico, mighty musician ; Zeppo, mighty wag, and Groucho, mighty lak’ a rose, were given a thunderous welcome at the station by three baggage men, two red-caps and a fellow named Willie, who said he loaned Harpo six bits in 1924, and what was to be done about it? “Have you boys any desire to plav ‘Hamlet”” they were asked. “Not unless they give us a stroke a hole.” r< plied Chico. LATEST GOSSIP. Colleen Moore didn’t make r ture, after a.l. She has INew York. A* Scott, the friend, lives there S. S Dine, the mystery writer, clip.- his own beard It takes tour pairs of clippers Jean Harlow was 20 z< ars old tins week and Paul Bern

I I I _ L (Fv Pete Reynolds' Intensive ’ reparation for the -t "’on-'l toiirnpv at Fort Wayne ; wj« started Monday evening by | •h° Decatur Yellow Jackets. Decatur will meet the Huntington Vikings at 3 o'clock Saturday af•ernoon and if successful in win”:ng that camo, will meet the winner of the Bluffton North Side < ■rente for the right to represent J •bo Fort Wayne regional at the ; ■■'ate final tourney at Indianapolis I March 20 and 21. 000 Th» sports writer in the Journal C->zett» refused to give the Yellow Jackets a chance in the regional •"urnev in a story written a short , ■lrn« a"n. He politely picks UuH*;-,-'->-> to defeat Decatur and •h-n Blrfct-n to w ; n th« regiona 1 . i Well, well, time will tell. 000 Dnr a t,. r Huntington at Huntington 23 to 17 several weeks so we can’t figure just how •h> Fort Wavne expert gets that way. Also. Decntur has defeated n 'nffton twice this season and North Side once. Bluffton handed •he Yellow Jackets their first defeat of the year but ample revenge was gained for that loss later. 000 Taking all these things into consideration. Basketbawl figures tha* the Yellow Jacets have a real opportunity to move right on to the final tourney at Indianapolis •his year and any one who counts them out of the running may well regret “them harsh words." 000 Marion Fea sei has been certified for p'av in the regional tourney, according to an announcement by Coach Herb Curtis Monday. Feasel was not certified for the sectional because of an attack of the flu and mumps at the time of certification list was sent in. Feasel will replace Fred Brown on the Yellow Jacket squad. 000 The other Yellow Jackets who ere certified are Deßolt, Schnepp, J. Hill. Snedeker. Zerkle, Steele, V Hill. Coffee and Buffenbarger. Th°se m°n were all certified for , the sectional. 000 Our friends at Berne didn't have i a great deal to say about the sec- ( tionai tourney. both columnists offer hearty congratulations to the

♦ gave her a birthday party Eddie Nugent's first role as a freelance will be the boy who married millions in Paramount's “Up Pops the Devil.” . . . Richard Rowland, former boss of First National, w ill be assistant to Paramount's Walter Wanger in New York. This disposes of rumors that he will be connected with Tiffany Buster I Keaton raises crawfish ami wild I quail at his Beverly Hills home. I Don't ask me why—the race for stars Is extending to writers, directors and studio executives. It will be a golden year for the hired help in Hollywood. DIRECTOR TO SPAIN. As soon as he completes "Mme. Julie,” Victor Schertzinger plans to take a camera crew and sound

We, W 4. ■ < oi Irene R rh

equipment t o Spain to film a t m o s p h eric shots for radio pictures’ forthcoming special, I "M a r c h eta.” i One of the obi jects of the trip 1 is to record a 60-piece guitar orchestra in Madrid. Radio officials figure ' that the song | “M a r c h eta ” j with a sale of

I more than 2,000,000 copies, has I created a ready made interest in i the title of the picture. I’he fact that the film will bring Richard Dix and Irene Dunne together again ■! also is looked upon as a box office ■ I factor. | NFW DIRECTOR FOR CLARA. With the picture already a week ■ under way, Ruhard Wallace has > been drafted to replace I.other | Mendes as director of Clara Bow's > new vehicle, "Kick In.” Mendes , asked to be relieved when he ' couldn’t agree with studio officials > on the treatment of the story “Kick In” is Willard Mack’s un . derworld melodrama, and is the first picture Clara has made since her recent court troubles DO YOU KNOW; I That Irene Rich once owned a cnicai-n ranch in Honolulu That William Beaudine, the di rector, writes stones for children under an assumed name'' : I That Claude Allister is mall} L Claud Pnliiiei. son of a general in i ' the English Army? renew jackets on tneir victory in the sectional and wish them the best of luck- in the regional tourney Saturday. We’ll say that s a mightv fine spirit and we are cure the Yellow Jackets appreciate it. 000 Both Tin Offs and Will Wynn bemoan the fact that Hoffman, ce riiiar Berne .. center, was not e’igible to play in the tourney. They spy that Berm* won’d have ' won the sectional if lie had been Don’t Get Up Nights It’s Natures Warning ‘‘□anger Ahead” Make this 25c test. When the I bladder is irregular, drive out impurities and excessive acids that cause irritation resulting in leg | p ”’ns. backache, burning and frei quent desire. BUKETS, eontainng biichu leaves, juniper oil. etc., works pleasantly and effectively | on the bladder as castor oil on the | bowels. Get a 25c test box (5i grain size) from any druggist, kfter four days if not relieved of ' retting up night, go black and get 1 veur, money. You are bound to ' .eel better after this cleansing nd you get your regular sleep. ■ Sold at Holthouse Drug Co.

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in the Bears lineup M'‘B. ’’ oito thing we never will know o( )<> (’migrutlllnliob* tire in older 'oday for the Si. Joe eighth vi.nl-| leant These boys won the uiumal Mfy series by defeating tlm Cent nil I >mn In th'' third 'H'd decld'—. game of the s■: n-s Monday nb’ht d Hie D. I! S gym 000 Central had won (he first I’lime. played during the lirst semmter of the school year. Iwo weeks ago, St. Joe won the second imine of the series and I’eeaptureil the trophy last night by copping the ruHber game. 000 After looking over both eighth grade teams lust week, it looks to the writer as though plenty of material for future teams in he'll Hie Central and Cathidie high schools is growing up. Those boys really were clever out there handing the hall and while on defense. 000 Any basketball lan who failed to see that game. ” missed a real treat Quite a kick to watch thes-> ■ youngsters 'pko- Hie game like veterans in *r manner of passing and slioetmg and footwork. 000 ON TO THE KEGUNAh. — — I not the nano—i rase at Hom*.

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LESLIE SIGNS BOXING BILL liuli in ipulN. Mnrch 19. (U.R) I'll bull creating a. stale boxing omm'hsion in Indiana, limiting | loutH to 12 rounds ami regulating I all ii Aiiur ami wrestling tnat<4iea. I «a signed late yesterday by Gov- I ~inor Hurry G. Leslie. The referee ami two Judges of I i-acli bout will be authorized to i render decisions, thus ending Inliana's reign of no decision ring : eventH. An attorney and secretary for ! the commission will receive $3,060 ! Cach. It was anticipated that rev■nue from licensing of officials, i and participants w. i’.ld net approx-' » Monument Is Erected to Famed "Billy the Kid” Fort Sumner, N. M.. Mar. 10. — (U.R- A long'fight that was made over the protests of church people, (in (Uy lias n suited in a monument | being erected at the grave here of Billy the Kid. New Mexico’s fa l 1 minis outlaw. Funds to erect the monument

"i"’. / , "10l- |i. I . , Indians | " ..I .I H: I*" 1 Hi 'l' Kc|.. '"’M I 0” h' l ’ Bull ah. \\ 1 fli '" 'i'e J | Buffalo. N Y ~^ ar . ]0 W ol Buffalo's female 1 ■ ■ gamzation m Ihft Vnl « ... ..tw j out the count! 6 LIQUID or TABLETS■ SALVE H erilES I:\| Y S (’OLn ra