Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 246, Decatur, Adams County, 17 October 1932 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
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DECATUR WINS ON LAST MINUTE FORWARD PASS Local Independent Team Scores In Final Minute To Win. 6-0 With less than a minute to play the Decatur Independents completed a spectacular pass to win from the Fort Wayne Independents, 6-0, in a football game played at Niblick’s field Sunday afternoon. Both teams played a fine brand of defensive ball with the Decatur team having the edge on the offensive. Twice Decatur was in position to try for a fie d goal but both attempts failed. Decitur followed the aerial route for most of her gains while Fort Wayne for the mast part depended on straight football. In the first half Decatur completed nine out of 17 attempts at forward passes, and gained 78 yards by this route. Fort Wayne made 35 yards on scrimmage while Decatur made 35. Decatur made nine first downs while Fort Wayne made j six. in the second half Decatur made 44 yards from scrimmage and 52 yards from passes. The locals completed six out of nine attempts at passes and Fort Wayne attempted 1 four anti completed none. Fort Wayne made 67 yards from scrimmage. Up to the last three minutes it!
City Water Bills are due and must be paid on or before Oct. 20 A 10% penalty will be added if bills are not paid by this date. City Water Dept. CI T Y II AL L
looked as if Decatur would have to be conso’ed with a moral victory based on the statistics. A pass from Bell to F. Brown put Decatur into scoring territory. A few plays I later a pass from Bell to Deßolt scored the touchdown. Bob Gass’s I * attempt to kick for the extra point! ): was blocked. The gun was fired al minute later with the final scorel ] 6 0 in Decatur’s favor. I Lineup and summary: Decatur Fort Wayne Schnepp LE Lott i | Bi 1 Gass LT Goeglein I Hurtt .. . LG Noble) j Rex C .. . Smith | < Snyder RG Mills - Boh Gass RT Johnson > F. Brown RE Stump . i Engle QB Romari ; Beery LH Ellenwood I lOmlor RH Beerman) ■ C. Brown FB Richendaller I I Substitutions: Decatur. Bell. Mur- ! ' phy. Mylott, Deßolt. Marbaueh. My- ! | ers. Snedeker. Stoneburner. Fort Wayne. Lucas, Trimpel, Myers. ■ Klepper. Buckles. Kierly. Officials, Beal, Horton. Cole. —— o—i —- COLLEGE FOOTBALL DePauw. 13; Hanover. 7. Indiana. 12: lowa. 0. Purdue. 7; Wisconsin. 6. Notre Dame. 62: Drake, 0. Michigan. 14; Ohio State, 0. Michigan State. 27; Illinois Wes] I levan, 0. Minnesota. 7; Nebraska, 6. Chicago. 20; Knox, 0. Northwestern 26: Illinois. 0. Pittsburgh. 18: Army. 13 Princeton, 0: Cornell. 0 (tie). Brown.‘7; Yale, 2. New York U.. 39; Georgetown, 0. Holy Cross. 9; Detroit, 7. Cirnegie Tech, 6; W. and J. 6 (tie). Colgate. 35; lafayette, 0. Duke. 34: Mary'and, 0. Penn. 14; Dartmouth. 7 Kansas State, 25; Missouri, 0. Georgia, 6; N. Carolina, 6. i Tennessee, 7: Alabama, 3. o High School Football i (Auburn, 19; Blufft. n, 0. South Side. 13: Witeh. 0 N .th Bide. 31; Warsaw. 0. Peru, 22; Huntington, 6. C bin.,bin City, 2-. i; R Chester, fi. o Pro Football Grein Bay Packers. 2; Chicago: i Bears. 0. Chicago Cardinals. 9; Boston ' Braves 0. New York Giants 20; Br oklyn I j D-doers, 12. Portsmouth Spartans. 7; Staple-) ton. 7 (tie). n
MICHIGAN ANO i PURDUE LEAD Set Pace in Big Ten Football Race With Indiana Close Behind Chicago, Oct. 17. ;U.R>—Michigan and Purdue continue to set the pace in the Big Ten race with Indiana ' sticking close to their heels. The Wolverines and Boilermakers each have won two Big Ten games while Indiana has won one and played a tie. Northwestern ' and Wisconsin are tied for fourth ' place, with one victory and one defeat each. Inasmuch as Michigan and Purdue do not play, they may finish the season in a tie for the tit’e. Both leaders have won two of the toughest games on the schedule. Michigan beating Northwestern. 156. and Ohio State, li 0. and Purdue defeating Minnesota, 7-0, and Wls- ; cousin. 7-6. From here out Michigan perhaps has the sofftest schedule, but the Wolverines have at least two hard games ahead of them, p'aying Inj diana at Bloomington, November 5 and Minnesota at Minneapolis November 19. Purdue’s toughest assignment comes this week when the Boilermakers meet Northwestern at | Evanston. It will be the third fiard : game in a row tor Purdue and to • dd to the difficulty Northwestern lis eagerly awaiting a chance to avenge last year's 7-0 defeat the hands of the Boilermakers. Northwestern completed its regJ u’ar schedule undefeated last sea.sI 1 on only to lose to Purdue in a posti season charity game which brought I about a three-way tie for the championship between Northwestern, Michigan and Purdue For the second time in a row i Michigan was outgained in yardage by its opponent but won from Ohio State. Harry Newman. Mich- 1 ! igan's eagleeye passer, threw two ' touchdown passes which enabled I the Wolverines to triumph. As ! Northwestern had done the week previous Ohio State outgained Mich- ' igan hut couldn’t beat the alert Wolverines. Purdue had a clone call with Wisconsin, winning by the margin of | Paul Pardonner's successful drop-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1932.
Poor Year for Invaders By HARDIN BURNLEY STASS WHO I FAILED IM TMEifS U.S INVASIONS THIS VEA/2- g INCLUDE COCHET > - _ AMD AdSTI/J, $ , w British WAtkE/e jf CUP TEAP), KAYE DOAJ Cj AND EAJIP wilgoaj / BL swift \ — V \I \ SPEED- ■ ' M I lost TC GAe >Sj£~<l |rA wood the % HAieMSKOOTH n / u % TROPHY PACESDm \ r x \ ? OFCANADA s ■•The A\li eVY W trf* \ F WAS OAJ £ j CAI/-MOU 3 . A’ r—mw successful ENGLISH fit UWa 1 INVADED- J GOLF CHAMP jpy ; HE WON failed IM ThE LCHER ATTEMPT ggg c-mm AMATEUR To WiAj THE - W £ <SOlf u-s. Title/ fAf 1952 S’.nditate Great Pru*»n cd |
INVADING sportsmen wiH mark 1932 in the black books. Hardly ever in the history of sport have foreigners who sought titles on American soil failed so completely as they did during the past spring, summer and early autumn. Away back in February there were the winter Olympics at Lake Placid. The exact scores in those games escape the writer at the moment. but in every respect the Americans came out in front. The Norwegians, the Swedes, the Swiss, the Austrians, in their own specialties on snow and ice, were surpassed by the athletes wearing the colors of the U. S. A. Cochet, of France, long by common consent the greatest tennis player in the world, came to America and lost his vaunted laurels to Ellsworth Vines, the talented string-bean of the American nets. In the tennis realm again. Perry
kick after the Boilermakers’ touch-, j down. A 30 yard dash by Jimmy Barter, Purdue’s sophomore half-i back, carried the bail to the 2-yard line from where Roy Norstmann, knifing ha'fback. took it over. Wisconsin scored on a triple pa-ss with a substitute guard making a 30yard run for the touchdown after receiving a lateral. Purdue Back Has Collar Bone Broken Lafayette, Ind.. Oct. 17—(U.R)—Afractured collar bone will keep Doxie Moore, Purdue halfl-ktek! out of the Northwestern game ati Evanston Saturday, Coach Noble, Kizer said today The injury was received in the' second quarter of the Wisconsin | game and will probably mean that Moore cannot be in uniform for at : least three weeks. Other members of the squad were hadly battered in turn'ng| back the Badgers. so Coach Kileri ordered a day of complete rest! today for the regulars. Indiana Regulars Given Rest Today Bloomington. Ind.. Oct. 27—<U.R) - Rest for regulars on the Indiana University football team was ordered by Coach E. C. Hayes today as a reward for its victory over the University of lowa. It was the first time Indiana had beaten the Ila wkeyes at bootball. The championship bee was buzzing around the campus today a« a result of Saturday’s triumph. Indiana has won one conference game ar.d tied one. This week the Crimson will meet Chicago at Chicago. Biblical Note The word reverend occur* nnlj once In the Bible. •Roly and rev- • erend is his niYte.
and Austin, proudly carrying the banner of Great Britain, found that competition io America was stiffer than they had anticipated The British Walker Cup team, comprised of golfers who had learned their golf on the island which is the very cradle of the game, just happened to run up against a Walker Cup team led by Francis Ouimet, and couldn’t stand the pace. The story of that rout is now legend. Kaye Don. one of the finest sportsmen the world has ever produced, came over here with a new speedboat. The holder of every speedboat record on the other side of the Atlantic, the gallant British speedboa’ king landed with high hopes f besting the American standard bearer, Gar Wood, in the Harmsworth Trophy races. Th’ result was a clean-cut victory forth, siiver-haired Wood. Although an invading team of American woman golfers had been routed in England las* spring, Enid Wilson, the British champ, went
American Is Slain By Chinese Bandits Mukden, Oct. 17—(U.R) —An unidentified American was slain to-' day by bandits 39 miles east of! Nantsamu Station, which is 60' miles east of Mukden on the Muk-I den-Kirin railway. It was believed the victim may I have been one of the three priests, stationed at the Mary Knoll Catholic mission at H«inping. Accompanied by a guard of five! Japanese soldiers, the American and a small party of Chinese wore traveling from Ilslnpiug to the railway station when they were attacked by a band of 50 bandits. The American was struck by a
Genial John on the Air S’ ’• > ■ -s* ■■'•: . --mtUk *w '" r w«| > r MI & il > \ (fell *f &w Z> fl fe’S&wjafc i 4-- z Ft l^'/? 1 ' Speaker John Nance Garner, of Texan, Democratic candidate for the Vice Presidency of the United States, is shown as he made his first major campaign address over the radio from a New York studio. Garner's speech, consisting mainly of an attack on the address made by President Hoover at Des Moines, recently, was broadcast over • nation-wide hook-up.
down to defeat before the finals at Salem only a few weeks ago. On top of this long record of defeats for invaders it is the duly ot the chronicler to record the results of the Olympic games at Los Angeles. There the issue was never in doubt. .More records were broken than ever before in the history of Olympic competition, and the notable fact was that it was the Americans who were breaking them Some foreigners broke records of long standing only to finish second to some American upstart who was simultaneously paring the record down still further. To balance things, there is only the feat of Ross Somerville, the silent Canadian golfer, who outdistanced one of H e strongest fields in years over the Five Farms Course in Baltimore to wm the U. S. amateur golf championship, succeeding Francis Ouimet, the beloved fairway professor from Boston. Next year, however, may tell another story. Copyrl«irt, 1131, Ktaa FMUre» Syndicate. Inc
! stray bullet in the clash between ' the bandits and Japanese soldiers i One Japanese soldier was wounded before the attackers were driven I away. o Sleeping Sickness to Be Alibi Seattle—(UP)-— Manton Th nip- ! son. 4‘>. accused of taking S4O fr m I the cash register of the Revenna ;,gar»ie, may offer a defense that he was suffering from sleeping aick- ; ness when he commitUd the crime. .1 O Triplets Enter School ■ Bosto.i, —(UP) —Thomas, B rnard ■ i and Theresa Donnelly recently e.irolled tegtiher in the first 'jrade .of the Chevcrus ptruchlal school, i They're six-year-old triplete
STRIKER GIVES | SCHOOL REPORT Attendance For First Month of School Is Announced Today i The attendance report tor the I Adams county schools for the first) -month of school was announced today by Superintendent Clifton E. I I Striker The first column of tig-1 ures shows the enrollment, the sec'ond column the average daily at , tendance, and the third column, percentage of attendance. Union Township Arthur Blakey, trustee. Esta Fleming 36 35.5 98.6 Bessie Carter 22 21.27 96.6 Paul Spuller . 35 34.5 98.54 I ParochialRev. J. M. Frosch 19 18.8 99 j Benhart Schultz 42 41.25 99.2 . Root Township Phil Schieferstein. trustee I Mary Clem 32 29.3 96.1 I : Root Twp. H. S. Mcrvtn Hostetler. Ethel Piper, Catherine W’eidler 55 52.49 98.6 ) I Grades— Harry Johnson 24 23.6 98.54 1] Margaret Schenck .34 33.6 98.8 ; ] Lois Fuhrman 25 24.95 99.8' i Parochial l M. •A. Gru-ake . 1 33.2 97.9 Pieble I jwnship Ernest Wortnman. Trustee Elizabeth Leyse 12 11 25 93.75 I, Pau’. Spuller 25 24.45 95.8 'Nellie Brodbeck 15 15 100 I Parochial ■ H. F. Neilson .47 46 98 Frieda Buuck . 29 27 94 Rudolph Stolp 62 60 9.’ 9 ] W. E. Vfileman. .45 11 97.95 ‘ Barbara Yolhath 37 35.78 99.38 Kirkland Township Daniel Scherry, Trustee Edna Borne 29 28.2 97.5 I i W illiam Griffiths 19 19 lUO ■ Oscar Geisel . 40 34.95 95.97 i Nel’ia Coppess 24 23.7 98.75. Pauline Buckmaster 28 27.23 99.2 ■ Raedei Andrews 38 35.35 93.03] Kirk and Twp. H. 3. R. J. Mann, Glennys Arnold. Albert Coppess. Lucille Beavers 92 S 8 97.5 i Washington Township T. R. Noll, Trustee Arlene Becker .30 29.3 97.66 I Clyde Troutner 21 20.6 98.09 Elmer Elirsam 28 26.7 98 88 Mary E. Potts 31 30.85 99.5 ' Maujuerite Lewellen 19 18.82 99.07 I St. Mary’s Township Orlen S. Fortney. Trustee. | Pleasant Mills H. S. — Henry Snyder, Mary ) Gulick. Velma Fortney, Helen Schenck 93 92.7 97.4 | W. G. Teeple 22 21.4 95 i William Noll 22 21. S 99.3 1 Francille O.iver 29 28.62 98.72 1 Matie Stevens 27 25.92 96.76 Bobo — Harve Haggard 29 28.08 96.81' Mardelle Hocker 26 24 95 97.84 ) Blue Creek Township David D. Habegger, Trustee i R. M Houck 42 40.7 97 Estelle Campbell 31 30.3 97.9 I James Fravel 27 25.9 96.1 i Eldon Sprunger 33 30.95 99.20 Monroe Township Noah Rich, Trustee Mi’dred McCray 42 39.35 94.7 A. E. Hunt 30 28.4 94.5
PRESTIGE! Your business is often judged by the kind of printed matter you send through the mails. We’re experts in Job Printing and can assure you that you’ll get quality printing at moderate prices. Decatur Daily Democrat Phone 1000 F—OUA. — — F printing! ■. — f PRICEf are LOWEST 1
Trapped Missionary f z 1 ■ : B, ■l ’— J Monsignor Raymond A. Lane, of Lawre.lce, Mass., founder of the Maryknoll Catholic Mission in-Man-churia. where 37 U. S, workers are now entrapped. The number in- ■ eludes 23 priests. 12 sisters and 2 lay brothers. When last heard from, the party reported they were unable to leave the danger area ow- ’ ing to the turmoil caused by the ' Japanese offensive against insurgent Chinese bands. ,
Rosamond Gould 25 23.5 94 24; .Myrtle Clements 21 20.7 98.45], J. Ray Duff 28 27.5 98.39 | Ezra Snyder 27 26.52 98.24' I Leo Strahm 13 42.35 98.47, Monroe H. S. — V. H Wagner, Rolland Sprunger. Vesta Rich, Dorthea Sprunger 115 112.5 98.61 i Grades— 1 Lloyd Bryan 25 23.8 99.171 Floyd Johnson 34 33.47 98.45! Ruth Gilbert 29 27.9 99.6 i Parot hial— J. I). R. Schwartz 53 52 9 99 81 French Township Edwin Beer, Trustee .Myron Lehman 26 24.95 96.11 1 IDorthea Bents 26 25.15 96.73 R. D. LeFavour 37 35.78 97.3 Marcella Robin 28 27 05 96 60 I Naomi Gilbert 32 30.5 95.04 ' ! Elizabeth Cramer 27 25.57 94.22 Hartford Township A. F. Baker, Trustee. I Linn Grove— Mary Schlagenhauf 30 29.42 99.71 Edna Glendening 26 24.70 98.89 'Hartford Twp. H. S.— Lester Kerr. Mary Su’livan, Mary Pusey, Ruth Mahoney. 85 84*07 98.9 1 John Whicker 43 42.7 99 Lester Reynolds 28 27.52 98.30 I muse Neuabauni 25 24.75 99 Wabash Township Ed Stahly, Trustee Jlaro d Long 36 35.78 99.38 (Gladys Long 28 27.9 99.89 I Russell Steiner 20 20 100 i | Geneva 11. 8. I ! R. O. Hunt. Nell
syn 'old friend return* J4APACUBA HAVANA, ft DOMESTIC I (ft Size reducedfoU
P - V|p - P V 'D- Gerak dine Runyon, Ma r HE Karet Rhoades i !(! A C Co.,k Mary Br<-nnan « mH Magdalena Hlrsehy n «? * Goldine Hutch.-!- ' ~. ?■! K !aut . r Mary \\ .. H| Cath.-rin,- I-..,-.,., .L **'W| Kherson Town W , ■ r w '' Ab!ie1 ' mWI Jeffr-rson 'D. ; jt s __ Ol'ii Mai,;, M„ rril; Tharp. p u ' !v Mina Coiii t .r «, J.ciinlni.-i iinw.c.ij, 41 , Hebe Madeline « State Fire Losses K Are Being Re<j J (Indian i fir.. , SrS aro beillK r ' annual r p ; ,r: just ’AM (Hcgston. S: e.-.. Ma , fe] W ro-ort ,nv • , is( , al i(>B Oeto’.. : iTL', and the fire Jd.dTSlXi) tB was iI.LI.NL ■ l 7 i, than for ih- pr . v ,; 0 ,,_ Al “ • Hl" I' of fi r , s ; 107 ' ‘’l - ea 1 557 , r ’2 ■ fewer tlian prrvk,M The fire loss in cities ''retjl population ai[crease of 74 ;.er < W t. i.M and in.' |), .pulati.-n th., fire low 248, th ■ <■' of Iper : th- C :i:.' ' loss was , a decrea. .• 1: Dp r cent I ‘ ” - - I Former Appellate I Court .Judge Dfl Indianap lie. net. 7 )eral sirvic w.ii be held haX morrow fr a, s . n \ nier judg- of th • Indiana court, wh died at his todiaM ’.tome follow: - v.-ral weete'H ness. Burial will in uainiiiaH (Judge Enl's'. who served tjH >terms on (be peiiate cwitfl |was elected in 1818. He nsH | namrd r: 1922 aand Ifcd. He® ; native i f Mulberry Grove. UM addition io -• .g as a junstfl 'lce saw service in the SpuMr® |erican war. vas a school taH a.td pracl ic d . ■ tight law. ■ A daugiUt r. Mrs. Dana E. i® ' survives. B Stolen Auto D:smar.t!ad I Shrewsbury. Mass.. — iCF)® | When Jerry li.-niirlia:i otlh® itiT recovered li:- >ito:no w leiH it had been missing only *■ Ihe found the radiator, the wMH i the starter, the headlights I tery, anu the tooHa x aad M removed. |
