Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 38, Decatur, Adams County, 13 February 1932 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Roth Decatur Teams Are Defeated in Friday Net Contes!

PERU SMOTHERS GURTISMEN IN EASY FASHION Yellow Jackets Triable To Stop Offensive Drive of Peru Hit'll School Still sltvitu> nvv iv I'roai Foreign I f loors l)c---litlur Itiult stliool Y'llow litt'kols look the worst b<tlinu a Yellow .larkel team Ins suHVrefl for five years Kr - ilav nielil when Peril ronmr*l a wav lo the tune of a I -‘J( I at Peru. The outcome of the game was never in doubt after the first lew minutes of the contest. The Circus City aggregation started earlv and. lambasted t.he basket from every square inch of floor space. The score at the half was 25-1 a for the home team. The rout was continued in th° l second stanza and the Peru aggro-; gation scored almost at will, hit-1 ting the net from every plat". The Decatur defense folded up and the offhnse was smothered! through almost all of the game. Coach Curtis gave till his boys an opportunity to play, hut few I of them accepted the opportunity! and the Peru score continued to roll up higher and higher. Bruce and Holland started for the winning team and Buffenbarger and Hill were the shining lights for the local team. \ I ineun and summary: Peru (51 i FG FT TP; Bruce, f 0 0 12 Youngblood, f ft 0 <* i I .oYeless. f 4 1!'! Pliillips, f 3 3ft Dunkess, c 4 ft 2 Britton, g 2 1 51 Holland, g 5 4 14 Totals 21 ft 51 Decatur (201 P:rffenbarg-*r, f 2 2 (i Strickler. f 0 o 0 Ogg, f t 0 2 ■ Eady, f 0 0 ft | Oav, c 2 1 61 Hill, g 1 3 5, Cowan, g 1 h 21 Feazel, g 7 ft 2ft i Totals 7 ft 201 Referee.. Tudor. Port Wayne. Score at half: Peru, 25; Deca-j tur. 12. t SEES CHANCE FOR DEMPSEY Detroit. Fell. 13. — (U.R) — .lack Dempsey has a better chance to win hack the heavyweight title this year than he did when he fought dene Tunney the second time in lft27, according to Johnny Kilhane. former featherweight champion, rnd llatt Hinkel. veteran referee. But Kilhane and Hinkel believed Dempsey must qitil his barnstorm-1 ing and adopt a new training program. They agree that Dempsey's punch is as good as the day he | beat Jess Willard. "Dempsey must avoid sleeping in hotels, making sleeper jumps and j keeping irregular hours if he wants j to come hack.” said Kilhane. who held the featherweight title from | 1912 to 1923. "He should retire to a training camp and begin a long siege of conditioning. He needs steady work over a long period to build his strength hack to tiie maximum, he needs the proper rest, and he needs lo concentrate on the task before aim. He can't continue his present program anti hope to ni:ik-> a real bid for the title. Kilhane has been a training tamp operator. Hinkel refereed the DempseyChrfstner bout at Cleveland Thursday night. He suggests the following program for the champion: 1. Pick a camp with pure air end favorable climate. 2. —Forget speed. Build up the legs, body, and reserve strength. 3. Train slowly hut steadily for i 5 or 6 months before fighting. Since resuming the second phase | of his tour, Dempsey has done lit -: tie training. He looks tired and | drawn about tile face when he does not get his proper rest. Hinkel thinks Dempsey can win hack the title in two bouts—by heating Primo Camera and Max Schmeling. "Camera would he a soft touch j f ir Dempsey." said Hinkel. “Demp-' rev proved against Christner that, ins punch is as dangerous as ever. Against Camera, he’d have to bob and weave a little, get inside Carnern's guard, and throw his vicious left hook. He would finish Camera quickly. "I believe Dempsey in the proper shape can beat Schmeling because the German comes to his oppeaent wide open. Schmeling is not a particularly good hitter, replying o na steady attack to wear ' down his opponent. Both fighters j i

nr,- tmtde to order tor Dempsey. "Schmeling couldn't afford to j | iry to wear down Dempsey," said j Kilhane. "I believe Dempsey would knock out the Herman Inside of six \ I rounds and that It would he a great - ! tight with us much action as In a i i 20-round fight." Dempsey s next appearance on j 'ills exhibition tour will be at Flint, j i.vlleh., Monday night when liej lmeets I’nt McLaughlin, Racine, | Win., and Joe Kohler, Chicago, in i two bouts of 2 rounds each. EAGLES WIN FROM ARGOLA Monmautu high school Kasim. Adam- county baskt .ball champ ' t ions .rii.imd Ar.ola high school • .men conquerors of Monroeville a, Monmouth Friday night by a : count of 40-24. The Hagrardmeti * . were in the lead throughout the . -crap and a! half time held a 22-14 advantage. Stultz. star Monmouth forward sprained an ankle and maybe un- ! able to play In tonight's game with {.offers a a. liu-atu:' high school , gypi nas him. Brokaw was the outstanding oftensive star or the winner- and ! Oberkais was best for Areola. loi night at 7:30 o’clock Monmouth will play Jefferson ai Decatur high school gyietnnasium. Lineup and summary: Monmouth (sv) FG. FT. TP Lytle, f 3 ft ft ] Fuellin f ® ! Stultz, f 2 1 5 I 1 llrokaw, c 5 111; ! Bit.net, g 3 2 8: I Fleming, g 2 ft 4 . ! N’ettr. e g ft U *' | j I'otals IS 4 4ft | Areola (24) I Corhat. f 1 2 4 ! Murphy l o ft 0 Frazier f 11 3| ! Walsh f 1 ft 2 ! Phillips g 0 ft ft ' | M,.s-. c 2 1 5 J’uerka g 3 4 Ift I I dials S 8 24 | basketball results College Scores Wabash. 25; Denison. IS. Evansville. 2"; Valparaiso. 21. High School Scores Vincennes. 21; Technical t Indian-1 lapolisl, 15. Cathedral tlndianapolisi, 34; | j Southport. It. Anderson. 21; Logans port, 13. Auburn, 27: North Side (Fort! j Waynes. 22. Bedford, 35; Franklin. 3ft. Tennyson, 21: Boonville, 4. (Ireensburg. 25; Connsrsville, 23. Moose Heart (111.1, 34; Crown , Point, 27. Covington. 24; Attica. 11. Berne. 36: Catholic (Decaturi, 27 Delphi, 25; Huntington, 2ft. Washington (East Chicago), IS; j Froebel (Gary l, 17. South Side (Fort Wayne. 28; | Hartford City, 21. Central Catholic (Fort Wayne), 121: Monroeville, lft. Lebanon, 21; Frankfort, 17. Nappanee, 24: Goshen. 12. i Greencastie, 25; Martinsville, 22. Valparaiso, 32; Hammond, IS. Jefferson (Lafayette), 22; CrawI fordsville, 12. I.iporte, 21; Fnion Mills. IS. Spencer. 24; Linton. 12. Alexandria, 11: Marion, lft. Michigan City, 19; Mishawaka,; i l,r) - Mitchell. 22: Bloomington, lft. Muncie, 55: Kokomo, 30. Newcastle, 31; Rochester, lft. Rnshville, 33; Greenfield, 20. Wabash. 21: North Manchester, 13. Orleans, 27; Paoli, 23. Peru, 51; Decatur, 2ft. Kendallville, 36: Portland, 22. Seymour. 21; Washington, lft. Columbus. 33; Shelbyvllle, 27. Central (South Bend). 16; Elk-: hart, 13. Brazil, 28; Sullivan, 11. Tipton, 18; Cicero, 11. Dugger, 22; Clay City, 11. Wiley (Terre Haute), 12; Gerst-! mever l Terre Haute I, 12. o BEET GROWERS RECEIVE NEWS — , (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE; ! strated that fact. Plans for reonening the plant here this year are going along as rapidly as possible and ft is ex- : | peeted that the contracts will be , ready next week. As soon as the : organization is completed, a program of work will start at the! plant and yards here. Representatives of the Great Lakes Sugar Company which is! financing the cooperative plan, are expected to visit Decatur in a few days, at which time funher plans will lie announced. E. G. Fricko and Andrew Fuelling of the Farm Bureau Growers association attended a conference of the sugar j company at Toledo this week and returned enthusiastic as to the outlook for the payment of farm , ers on the old crop and the operation of the mill this year I

BERNE BEARS 6EATD.C.H. S, AT BERNE GYM ... Commodores Make Brave Effort With Two Players Out of Game Deciilur ('. a l It o I i c liiyli schoi.l Commodores bowed to Herne hit'll s hool bttskelbell team til B> me Fridnv 1 nisjlil aller a ffsttiu' lull losing scrap. The final score was !?(>-27. In the ore!i id inti tv Hern- graders Ikm! Boh NYeniholfs Si. Joe lenm Itv ;t count of 12H-1 In the preliminary Braden a’id Murphy led the Decatur attack and S.-lutg. St-iner and Dro were best on the Rerne offense. The score at the half mark was 11-ti. for Rerne. Co h I arrent was compelled to make drastic changes in las, Commodore lineup for the Rerne* game because two players. Boh Klienhenz and carl Izise failed to make scholarsliip requirements.! W. Lose took Carl I .OSes place! at forward and Miller was moved | ; to center to replace Kleinhenz and I Eddie Hess was stationed at (hel other forward post. The team combination worked about as evenly as could he expected but the Rears showed improvement and a great deal of (earn work which has been allsent; in most Berne games this season. The Rears went into an early i lead and at the end of the first I quarter were leading S-3. Both teams were even in the | second quarter and • Rerne still lu*ld tenaciously onto its 5-point j lead at half time, the count being \ ! 14 ft. M tie* start of (lie second half the Rears started an offensive | drive and increased their lead to* ! 25-17 at the close of the third I I quarter. The cioaing quarter was! ; featured by brilliant offenses on; 1 the part of both teams, with I neither having a decided ad- * | vantage. Linenn and summary: | Rerne ("fit FG FT Tl’| j Braun, f 4 1 ft. 1 [tracker, f 2 4 8 j I Yager, c 4 0 8 j Aeschliman, g 10 2! j Brandt, g 3 3 !<| Totals It S 361 I Commodores (271 Hess, f 3 6 12 f \V. I.ose, f ti ft ft Miller, c 2 15; i Omlor. g 2 1 ’> Haiti, g 2 15 Totals ft ft 27 Referee, Welboum, Fort Wayne. R-at half: R.me. It; Dcea- ] tur, ft. G. 0. P. DINNERS OPEN CAMPAIGN n INTINUED FORM PAGE ONB desk where the Civil War Presi-! dent wrote his Emancipation proclamation. Above it was a lifelike i portrait of the immortal. Mr. | Hoover confined his remarks to { hat theme. While we are in the midst of ! the difficulties of this day," he I I said, "we may well entertain the j feeling that history will record! i this period as one of the most diffi ; i ult in its strains and stresses up- ; on the timbers of the Republic tlmt j has been experienced since Lin j coin's time. “There are enduring principles , and national ideals to tie preserved ! against the pressures of today. "Tiie forces with which we -are I contending are far less’ tangible than those of Lincoln’s time. They are invincible forces, yet potent in II heir powers of destruction. We i are engaged in a fight upon a i hundred fronts just as positive, just ins definite ami requiring just a.greatly the moral courage, the orjganized action, the unity of strength and the sense of devotion in every : community as in war. "I nm confident of the resources, the power and the courage of outpeople to triumph over any national difficulty. They are rallying to their responsibilities." It was the first speech Mr. Hoover had made in a political background since his candidacy w*as officially announced. Senate Floor Leader Watson follow’ed the President, speaking from a Lincoln day dinner here. lie analyzed the President’s record In office and said; "What President, save alone the sainted Lincoln, was ever more maligned and misrepresented than the one who has just addressed us? And what President more than he who today sits in tiie loftiest seat of earth lias ever been so traduced and aspersed? “No President’s name in the list , lias labored more earnestly. Or toiled more ceaselessly, or striven more honestly to lift the nation out of the slough of despondency into

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, M BID W’A i- 1

which it had been plunged by sheer | force of conditions. "Yet no critic has risen to say | that lie would have pursued a dlf fn-ent course or adopted a con trary policy had power to do no' been committed to hint.” — ——— , SECRET TREATY HRAN DEI) FALSE ! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) have everrulcd the demands for war by deciding that tin* soviets at present were in no position to face it he presumably highly organized* war machine of modern Japan. It was recalled that recent illsi patches from Moscow reported an ! "ominous silence" In government quarters concerning the clash of Russian end Japanese in * rests In Manchuria when Japanese troops 'occupied Hat bin. chief city on the |Chinese Eastern r ilway. heretolore jointly controlled by Russia land China. The Japanese consul at the same time at Vladivostok. Siberia, near

Help yourself to the benefits of $18,000,000 in improve-ments-70% higher anti-knock (superior to some premium gasolines)— quicker cold weather starting. This ace of motor fuels COSTS YOU NOTHING EXTRA! i The battle for your business is on—and we’re out superior in anti-knock to some premium gasolines in the front with $18,000,000 worth of refinery im- costing three cents more per gallon! Equally imporprovements to give you the highest quality regular font, the new Regular is geared up to quicker cold gasoline that money can buy-the ace pf motor weather starting, split-second acceleration and surfuels—without one cent increase in price! prising economy in operation. The new Sinclair Regular Gasoline has been Use this amazing gasoline tor 30 days and you’ll stepped up 70% in anti-knock quality—it’s actually be a regular customer for Sinclair Regular Gasoline. EASTERN INDIANA OIL & SUPPLY CO CORNER SECOND and MARSHALL STREETS RILEY CHRIS MAN, Manager * „„ 4 „„ „ , N „ lA* 1) b ( All v

I the Manchurian border and on the | I'ueitic. reported "warlike" mtl- - lea by the Russian*. The . . ' j< fftelala have repeatedly eninhm'-lz led llteir desire for pea .. ! Tiie soviet delegation at Geneva leeently admitted that certain ! changes were being made to 'strengthen gurrlaoi'x mi tin* Mu Irliurtan frontier. They t 'Uitendi d, liowever. that 1 Moscow v.:h concerned only « itL ( j the possibility that White Russians '((izarlat aymimthlzera) now exiled in Manchuria, would attack t.< 'soviet union. Tokio, Feb. 13.— (U.R) The gov ernmeiit today d tiled any "secret treaty" with soviet Russia. The np. its of such au agreement wv. * h laettfized as "ridicuh Moscow. Fell. 13. (U.R) The so vlet government today officially <l*tiled reports in l.otglon of a "se cret treaty" with Japan on Manchuria and other far eastern questions.

DEMOCRATS IN near I VISDN iGONTJNUKC* from FAUE l)M 1 '(Todtali/e on the de:ulh>ck between ■j( other candidates. r is reported th. Dailey will | rake a sta • meal I*- '* '' 1 ' dfion very soon and many L -><*“' ■ that it will he worded (Buns the Mines of Alfred E. Sbith’s rece't. lammuPcft'-'H-oncertHnf the iwm l ot -atie I’residmtial nomination, a : ,s i* -mr-ed that-1>» *-v will 'I ' i;: i-o make a fight so rthe nomination ; —Ravli.; the Inference that h* wouldn't rftwn upon any aitem:*’' 'of his l.a ket io saing the CJID -a- --.; tioa in his favor. Xa.r’s statement ltiig!>t ' |p ttiU<* n in much the -a tie light. It lias been in led out that .vhile he has come out d finitely for renmnlna '.m to Ills present position, there ir nothing to prevent his name being inpected in(o llte convention fight for - governor. He is believed to base ' 1 :*' 1

josltlon and w-ptild like ul-! I,i overthrow the McNutt move I ' ”' !U MR PICKETED |{V STRIKERS (CONVINCED HU’M 7‘AGK ONE) i ~| tl,e no av. Afler the t’euluiy plane landed the second alltp ' catne down. |,avid Behncke, pr>uldent of th-* ;;nion supporting the nvlatm - in thelt wage disagreement, -aid the plane was not flown by uj i loer Century pilot. The plcketKiL will eontlmte, he said, as part t tie* aviators’ program of pas,;Vl. resistance to the wage reduc,ii which they contended would ■nt their sa’aries 4ft per cent. pi,,, century lines atindunccd they now had signed 11 pilots and expected to resume full s wviee; , , ,oon as the men had been _ veil th: rough tests over tlte , >m|.any’n routes. Get the Habit — Trvfe at Hoe e *

(; - |{ l <>( ! Mn° o|) *■ puldlcai: " P 'tS| *" "• I i:’., s„. Wit N "" ■' i:- ' - |gj • I'"’"* • • >. .. !■ & V three ] 1 'i ::i