Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 130, Decatur, Adams County, 1 June 1932 — Page 5

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©Si PLAYERS ’*l DRAW FINES W'”li«|^B. (|;inJ 1. (U.R) The , \\ Sox were without • ■ players. in. Ind h ,,;n. . s MH a result of the IDMa^^B'"' l iispended for ten ~| Fonseca whs H.her Charlie Berry ’'■‘"'-it . Frank Grube sluo ;-.er il.i ridge. president of 1- j ft^^B n "' ri ' ,l! 11 ' lgl "‘' after u 1 "' 1 ' on Monday's - 'iided broken ■'■itHiJKJe d.■ rated head for the ‘ -.lf was lor his neglect of ~ and Berry ■ JE,, : . rame iiiuier . .... « Harridge believed action. |r clubhouse follow /' double-defeat her. III. Im been i ' lent liarridge said. the tight could have had Moriarity bullish ■« . Jil.ners from tile game. I h .lol.'iny Butler was susfie five days without pay. clary ruling, for his Mjtiii is and profane language to--11 a..i m the second game Kl,. - ’ 111 Hie field by the line incident was a file 1 'i- the bitter feeling.

I Shunting Cupid Aside! M—— — -'-By 11 AR DIN Bl' R M .EY' — iffll THE MONTH of t JACK I J INI IE ° gets His ■■■ WILL BE ’ LA ST -JS ■•MPoffi'rxMT SPoeTs jfXW" II EVENTS SCHEDULED \'J( cTSTi?I I Fore JUNE INCLUDE- JCY W op4lL ■ -THE BreiriSH OPEN- £?XI f ,... y x MONTH f I ■•• THE U-£- OPEN-18-the Poughkeepsie Sib 1 ■■■ I I AND WE-HARVAPD II A H BOAT PACES" a J7 ■■•SHAreKEy-ScHMELING k H Heav/ title sour- t ** I ■’WiMSLEDOAJ TENNIS- / X * ■F k "WTMAN CUP / TX V ■ matches - Z 4 2) \ ■ I sectional l\ jfc. IL II jney-ours- \ A. I L I / f \ \ , "'K/ C-A/J JACK \> j E U f \ Haiit come I z t Ol' tepL. THreousH? .X i r v //.-"Vwb I I t!<k .JK.WV/ . lagg ( IB y Bi z / X -T.L.T'~~ I Cl I A? ’ I ' I \ / | ®-'' ' NATiOAJAL XJ V L,—s I j GOLF.AND 1LI E .uM l£ /... ///" 6 , 7W : y Jfcz± II > 15.12, King Kcnltirci Syndic*'. In*. 111 ilain r, < !, " s 1 l " il ''" ,, lM r 11 .rr.la n ftr.nii

■VIK month of June is usually I set aside for little Dan Cupid's pecadillos —but this month of ®’ n 1932, differs in that SPORT shi ' ca Pßal letters-—threatens to a n 'S °P erat ‘ ona t 0 t * ie look over the list of sports B< -’heduled for this month, s th" British women’s golf rjß? j'’’ c . wir, d in fc up right now; the "®"’d States open golf championtgr'' .lb® British open; the Pough B^F’ sle Regatta; the Yale-Harvard 'Sf’, the Wightman Cup tennis the Wimbledon tennis (women’s June 10S ana the men’s June 22); the “sectional Olympic tryouts top it off there’s that g-awaited clash between Jack P*ey and Max Schmelir.g for world’s heavyweight title! <uite some competition for the le God of Love, what! a a beautiful spot near Kings-

Harridge said. The Sox players and officials were reported satisfied with Presil ’ Landis, high comm bull, is expected. Moriarty also is , not expected to appeal the decis- ( ion. • A penalty of suspension of front . 90 days to one year is provided liV » major league rules for a personal t assault upon an umpire but Har- . ridge asserted that this extreme measure was invoked only after a i ruling has been appealed. 1 Harridge said his investigation ' disclosed that Gaston was the only ' player that engaged in fisticuffs t with the umpire and the situation • tended to bear out statements of t the other three players that they i entered the melee only to separate i the two fighters. He criticised them, however, for not peventing r Gaston from attacking the umpire, f None of tin- Sox players was sus- . pended during the investigation, r contrary to customs, because, Har- . ridge explained, the umpire's state-i I ment was not available before yasterday's game. J President Alva Bradley of the . |Cleveland club, who witnessed the J incident, and Manager Fonseca said . I today they were satisfied with the . i uiing. i “Harridge is isiss and anything . he says goes," Fonseca asserted. 11 Q THE BIG FIVE By United Press . Babe Rush, Lou Gehrig and Hack Wilson were idle. Al Simmons tripled and singled, accounting for one run, in six times up. Bill Terry went hitless in four times at Mat.

, I ton, New York, Max Schmeling is a getting ready for the big fray, ror ‘ three weeks Maxie has been going * through the training motions and previous to that he toured the I country giving exhibition matches. • There are still twenty days to go before he squares off against i Sharkey, but Schmeling is going to be right for this bout. You ■ know it takes more than a tew . years to erase the memory of that . previous meeting with the Boston g °Much water has passed over the fistic dam since that memorable i night. Maxie has improved. He . turned in a masterful exhibition against Young Bill Stribling, with > the result that many critics, for- ; marly hostile, have hopped upon the Schmeling band wagon. Maxie, , with characteristic Teutonic thoroughness, has learned his bust- i too, is hard at work. . I On the occasion of a recent visitco:

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JUNE I, 1932.

.SENATORS WIN ' GREAT CONTEST New York, .lune 1 -<U.R) Con- I nle Mack, shrewd manager of the I I’hikidelphla Athletics, would willingly lei the Washington Senators heal his team several more times If every defeat would reveal that a top-notch pitcher added to the j Athletics lineup as was the case M yesterday. 1 lie Senators nosed .out the A's , a to 4, after n 12-inning struggle, ,' lull Connie almost disregarded the t i score as he marvelled at the | amazing mound performance given by that young Portuguese 1 southpaw, Tony Freitas, hurling i his first major league game. Connie saw young Freitas hold 1 the formidable Senators to seven lifts in 10 innings. Freitas was , acquired recently from the Sacra- ' motto club of tie Pacific C-cast league in exchange for Pitcher Jimmy Deshong and some cash. Two of the seven hits yielded .by Freitas were home rjins, hut he still held tne Senators to t 3-all tie when he was removed in I the tenth inning for Pinch Hitter John Hoving. George Earnshaw replaced Freitas on the mound, and was charged with losing the game. Heinie Manusli welcomed Earnshaw's arrival in the eleventh with a home run. Philadelphia tied the score, ' but the next time Manesh came up iin the twelfth he drove in the winning run with a triple. The Chicago White Sox scored i five runs in the sixth inning to . down Cleveland's Indians. 6to 5. in spite of five Chicago errors. Earl Averill drove out his ninth ' home run for Cleveland. Detroit at St. Louis was washed out. They were the only I American league games sched-

to the site of the affair, a new bowl being constructed by the Madison Square Garden Corporation in Long Island City, Jack remarked that he was ready There hasn’t been much news from the Sharkey camp to date. Rumors have it that Jack, fighting for probably the smallest money in years, is not so keen to help the ballyhoo for the bout. Sharkey was forced to relinquish two-and-a-half per cent of the challenger's share to get the bout—it is possible that he would have waived all his end if pressed—and reports have it that he, personally, would like to see the affair a financial flop. In this frame of mind it is highly probable that the inconsistent gob will be sure to have one of his good nights three weeks hence. If so it should be a great shindig. Well, it looks like a great month —for Cupid and sports! loppUht. 1833. mturw Syndicate, ma,

Beaten Umpire r s ' Mi Mfr Cp*-** -or < _.__A t ,w. • George Moriarty, America it League umpire, who was severely beaten by White Sox players at the end of Monday’s gume at Cleveland. tiled. Pittsburgh’s Pirates advanced to a tie with Cincinnati for third place in the National league by defeating tile Reds, 4 to 1. Pittsburgh sewed up the game witli three runs in the first inning. The Chicago Cubs downed the St. Louis Cardinals. 3 to 1, as Lonnie Warnecke chalked up his seventh pitching victory of the season. He yielded six hits to the Cards, while Jess Haines allow'd the Cubs seven. Big Ed Brandt limited the NewYork Giants to four hits while tlie Boston Braves won, 7 to 2. Wilfred Knothe drove out a home run with two on base to feature the Braves’ four-run rally in the fourth inping. They were the only National league games scheduled. Yesterday’s Hero: Heinie Manush of Washington, who hit a home run in the 11th and drove in the winning run id the 12th with a triple. RIG FIELD FOR TROTTING RAGE Goshen. N. Y. (U.R) When the Grand Circuit meetings open, in June, 34 candidates for the worlds richest trotting horse stake will begin active campaigning for the feature of the August meeting here, the $60,000 Hambletonian Stake. Its third successive stand at Goshen may thi-i year atta.k the largest field of three-year-olds to com pete in the event during its seven years of existence, according to William ill. Cane, president of tlie Goshen Mile Track Tssociation. Only 13 candidates will be needed to surpass the stake's greatest field, and on the basis of two-year-old records, owners of at least half the present number of entries indicate it will be worth the chance. to pay tlie final SSOOO fee due August 16. one day before the race, according to Goshen officials. Holding her edges as the favorite in the winter books and up to the present time is tlie crack fill, Maid McElwyn, 2:02%, owned by the Newark banker-sportsman, 11. Stacy Smith, quoted at 3% to 1. The Lad, a star in Hie stable of Henry Oliver, Pittsburgh steel man, is quoted at 4 to 1. Tlie Lad is the son of t’rnaz anti Rose Scott, which has a threc-year old record of 1:59%. She was one of three trotters, incidental'y, bred of the same sire and dam by Oliver, with records tinder two minutes for the mile. Quoted at 5 to 1 is tlie Hanover Farm's colt, Calument Chuck, with The Marchioness, owned and trained by William F. Caton, of Syracuse, at 6 to 1, Holly rood Robin, at 7 to 1, owned by J. L. Dodge, of Lexington, retired patent medicine king, carries the hopes of Kentucky in the stake. LESLIE CALLS EXTRA SESSION OF LAWMAKERS .CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Kingham, Indianapolis, manufacturer and William 11. Settle, president of the Indiana Farm Bureau, headed the group chosen by Bush and Myerr. Questionnaires sent to legisltd tors by the farm bureau brought responses from 33 senators and 65 representatives agreeing witli only two exceptions to limit tlie session to discussion of tax matters aid to use tlie 17 points as the basis for their discussions. Q Atonement'* Quality If the Atonement were not too wide for our intellectual comprehension. i would be too narrow for i our spiritual necess'Mr.—Earl ll**four. K. G.

RACE DRIVERS RECEIVE MONEY Indianapolis, June 1. — (U.R) — i Prizes and awards totalling $1)5,000 were given race drivers at their annual dinner last night following the 500-mile race Memorial Day. Fred Frame, Los Angeles, who won first place, received $32,050, of which $20,000 was cash prize from tlie speedway and tlie remainder endorsement prizes and commercial awards. Howard Wilcox, Indianapolis, who finished second, received $12.- ■ 650. Billy Arnold, who appeared witli one arm in a sling as a result of an accident which forced him from tlie race, received $3,345, a : large portion if which was lap | prizes. I Louis Schneider, winner of tlie 1931 race, received a gold medal for being No. 1 driver in the A. A. i A. last year. Frame received seci ond place award and Ralph Hep- ; barn third. Phil Shafer, who finished 11th, was presentisi tlie Julius C. Walk sportsmanship trophy. Juan Gaudino, South American , champion, the only foreign entry, received $570. He went out witli > broken clutch spring. Gaudino said he would be back next year. i RIVER LEVEE BREAKS AWAY (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) i threatened witli destruction. ’ There are 20,000 acres of ri< 11 ! farm land in the patli of tlie brown 1 torrent. Tlie Colorado is at the highest level since 11)21. Levees that hold ' back its wati’rs have been under terrific strain. An opening 12 feet wide was discovered in tlie dyke at 5 p. m. yesterday. At midnight it had widened to IS feet. ' The three deaths attributed to the floods occurred near Yuma. Ariz. Robert Daniels, bis wife, and Mrs. Jnania Allison, negroes, 1 drowned while attempting to cross Houghteling latke on horseback. - They had been discussing the i flood situation witli friends on the > other side of the email body of i overflow water. A dozen families in tlie district were ready to flee the rising Colorado. Emergency crews summoned from Blythe to tlie site of the , levee break by screaming fire i sirens failed to stem the water. A , rat hole in the wail ‘ that held bai k a flow of 95,0)10 second feet was believed to have started the gup. 1 The water poured into analnnd- ' oned canal which carried it toward ' the rich fields in the soufhern valley. ’ C. T. Mahoney of tlie Palo Verde I irrigation district, was directing I Hie volunteer workers. Despite Ids hope that tlie crumbled levee would be repaired after a few hours the water was gaining. ; Tin river stage is unusually high this year due to heavy fall of snow in the mountains and silt which had been deposited in the river bed in tlie last two years. STROKE PROVES FATAL TODAY TO L. C. WARING (CONTINUED FROM I’AGE ONE) . and had completed his morning , shave. Apparently he had been I sitting on a stool and had pul on Ills socks and shoes when stricken. The fact that a bottle of milk and tlie morning papers remninod ' on the porch of his home, caus'd his friends and business associate. •i to become alarmed over his ab- ; scenic. Mr. Waring was exact to a degree and his schedule seldom varied from day to day. , Ho had a business appointment i with J. C. Bernsten and H. 'l. Sobol, who recently purchased the • stock of goods and machinery of I lie Waring Glove company and . I when lie did not. appear at the .' office, they ma le inquiry about him. After several hours claimed and Mr. Waring did not make hii appearance it was decided to enter his homo. Friends Are Notified Cal E. Peterson and John Ever--tt. friends ed' Mr. Waring’s wer" notified and Mr. Peterson took charge of affairs. He telephoned i Ross McCullough. Chai b « Wentli erhogg and L. G. Ellinghani of Fort Wayne, personal friends of the deceased. They came immediately to Decatur. Relatives Notified A brother of Mr. Waring's, William Waring, and a niece, Mrs. W. D. Sanders of Columbus. Miss., where Mr. Waring owned a 1600 acre plantation, were notified by telegram of his sudden death and word was awaited from these relatives as to funeral arrangement:. Came Here in 1903 Mr. Waring came to Delatin' from Bluffton in 1903, where he was employed as a railroad tele graph operator, and established ! he Waring Glove Company in die building at the northeast corner' i of First and Monroe streets. His business grew to such pro-j

portions that in 1912 he*ercctod tlie present modern two story brick biyidfng.on the south side of Monroe street, adjacent to his residence. For many years the Waring Glove Company gave employment to several score of women in this city and the Waring ttrand of gloves was known over ii wide territory. Mr. Waring also owned plants at Rochester and Huntington, Indiana and was for many years associated witli the late D. C. Laforty of Huntington. Following Mr. Laferty's death, Mr. Waring became side owner of tlie business. Mr. Waring was born in Gre'iiville. Ohio, January 25, 1861. His boyhood was spent on a plantation In Mississippi. His mother diol when lie was a lialiy and lie was reared by a governess. He came to tills section of the country when iie was 15 years of age and until locating in Decatur was bm ployed in railroad offices in Blufflon. Fort Wayne, Hartford City and Marion. Mr. Waring was affiliated witli several banking and commercial institutions in Decatur and Fort Wayne. For several years he was .1 director of the First National Bank in Fort Wayne and was a director of the Old Adams County Bank of this city. He was also financially interested in other business concerns. Mr. Waring was not married. In lodge affiliations lie was a thirty-second degree Mason, a member of tlie Blue lodge and Knight Templar's commandery it Bluffton and of the Scottish Kite and Mystic Shrine at Indianapolis. He also was a membtr of tlie Decatur Knights of Pythias and of 'he Fort Wayne Episcopal church. Fnneral arrangements will probably not lie completed uptil tlie arrival of Mrs. Sanders. Ids niece.

Those Teams! By HARDIN BURNLEY Ghe T’GESS, LEO THE U'iTH, at the JY HELM, SHOWED bn/ 1 THEM WILL r- . MAKE PLENTY Or » - T&OUSLE PtAi Z ,moT'Tteams h zlMr this . t ■/. i —~~7, A; \ / V ni vaJi a ]«| . WW4 BRAVES' |]/M? ...i Two BI2AINY > MASTES'-MIAJP / (£^2 / > J < LEAD£ g s ; , j J © 1932. Ring Features Syndicate, Inc., Great Britain rights reserved. POPT

■®<THEN the current ba.- ball i Ml’ season opened, two of the ’ ’ teams which were torn from all hope by “expert” opinion were the Boston Braves and the Detroit Tigers. Here, most of the more prominent sports writers were agreed, were two teams almost certain of a cellar berth. The Braves had been pasted all over the grapefruit league by , the Yanks, and the Tigers had been sent back to the jungle by McGraw’s apparently invincible Giants. Yet after the season opened both of these “weak” teams set out to serve notice on the other seven clubs in their respective leagues that they were going to be factors all the way through. The Braves started out by completely vanquishing the Dodgers and Giants, punishing the Phillie?, pounding the Pirates, and highhatting the world champion Cards and the high-flying Cubs. What if they did take a few drubbings! from the Reds? The Reds, most' improved team in either league, i were beating everyone else, too.)

APRIL FIFTH DERBY WINNER Epsom Downs, England, June 1 (U.R) April tlie Fifth upset ail expectations by winning the 153rd renewal of tlie derby today before a vast throng of half u million which had come Io see tlie expected triumph of Orwell, tlie favorite. Dastur was second and Mircale third. Royal Dancer finished fourth and Firdaussi fifth. Orwell was never in the lead and could not get up. April the Fifth finished threefourths of a length in front of Dastur. which led Miracle to th ■ wire by only a nose. One of the greatest crowds in the lortg history of the world's greatest horse race was gather 'd on the rolling downs. The entire royal family was there, and Amelia Earhart, first woman to fly tlie Atlantic, attended witli Lord Astor. April the Fifth, owned by Toni Walls and ridden by Fred Lane, was 100 to l> in tlie betting. Dastur, owned by the Aga Khan, was 18 to 1 and Miracle was 100 to I). Tlie time for tlie distance of approximately a mile and a half was 2 minutes 43 seconds, compared witli tlie record of 2:34 2-5 made by Call Boy in 1927. Walls, tlie proud owner ol April tlie Fifth, is an actor and theatrical producer. He not only owns April the Fifth, but trained him as well. o Amazing Figure* A light year equal.: '.S,'tf),Otk),ooo miles.

I The Tigers benched Big Dale ■ Alexander, who led the American ! League in batting for the first l month last year. They recalled Gerald Walker, cocky and very able outfielder, from Toronto. A slugger named Davis supplanted Alexander at the initial sack. Gahringer came back better than ever at second. Rogell took over the shortstop’s berth, and an earnest worker named Richardson was posted at third. For pitchers there were Whitehill, Sorrell, Wyatt and Co. with lots of individual ability but with not so much of a record for achievement. Detroit had most of these boys before, and still lost pretty consistently*. Well, Detroit played around with the first division, took first place, held it for a while, and at last reports were still going very well, thank you. And thank Mr. Bucky Harris, the shrewd young manager of the Tigers. After all, a weak team that wins doesn’t do so without reason. ( There must be some explanation. ■ And the fact is that the Boston i Braves and the Detroit Tigers. 11932 editions, tore the National;

PAGE FIVE

EARLY MEETING BEING SOUGHT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) and dried'' plan wo. ked out with the United Staton. Pending further information, -ofj flclals here forei ust: » 1. That the London conference, If , i agreed to by Franco and Italy, will 1 1 be held sjon after the meeting on .I .'operation* at Lausanne June 21. , I Then Europe will know what to ex- , pert from Germany and will have , | some idea what it will ask the ' United States to do aijjiut war J debts (lamigli they will nut he dls- ! cussed at London.) ' ! 2. That tlie ci.iilerenci- agenda will include discussion of ways to . rl.io commodity prices to tlie level ’ f siy, 11)26, and consideration of . | low silver iprii es, trade restrictions, I emlbargoes, possibly tariffs. 11 Tlie B itlsh proposal wa* not unexpected. For many ‘iveeka states11 men have talked informally of such . a meetin.’. Toe United P.ess preli dieted several weeks ag > that a • i conference was in pr spect; but I notliing official had been announced until Stim-on emerged lite yesteri day for a long conference with President Ho v.-r. PRODUCTION REMAINS HIGH 'i (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE! >' 74; Henry Aschloman, 72.5; 'Em I est Krc-utiman, 72.2; Ernest i Kruetzmsn, 71.7 and Henry Asch--i ieman 71.6 pounds fat. I AKohaG Good U*e Nearly rfI.OOOJXX) gallons of iilco hoi ore used each year In the radiators of automobiles to prevent freezing. i — 0 DANCE TONIGHT SUNSET

i and American Leagues apart with i their early playing simply because t they were directed by two of the | smartest managers in baseball. r Bill McKechnie, at the helm of , I the Braves, is now working out the I final year of a 3-year contract. Before he took over the National i League destines of the Beantown, . he won pennants for Pittsburgh ' and St. Louis. . Bucky Harris won two pennants for Washington. So these two “surprise” pilots ' of what were allegedly about the weakest of major league teams, J will not feel entirely lost if they , pull the biggest surprise of all anil meet in a World’s Series in ' October. ! And incidentally, it would be 1 the second World’s Series meeting -of these two canny leaders. The • last time, McKechnie was man- ’ aging Pittsburgh (it was in 1925) ■ and he gained the laurels over ! Harris, who was managing Wash- : ington. Bucky would like to even 1 , that score, and while the betting ■ iis ven? much »g*inst it, the unI certainty of the game leaves a ■ chance. ■I Tigers vs. Braves? Well, maybe. , | Copyright. 1882, Kun i*e«turw Syndicate, iuc.