Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 269, Decatur, Adams County, 12 November 1932 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SPoRTse
BFCATUR BEATS PORTLAND. 6-0 Independents Score In First Quarter to Down V isitors Here T-hn Decatur Independents registered their fifth victory of the sea-, son, defeating the Portland Ind,epen-; dents, Armistice Day. by a score of 6 to 0. Pi ying on a snow covered :ieid and freezing weather 'neither team was able to nt ke irr ,ny long gains. Only a small c rowd attended thegame due to the inclemency of the! weather. The only score of the game was made early in the first quarter. De-! c.tur, getting the trail on the thirtyyard line, completed a pass from I Bell to F. Brown who crossed the : g ' ,1 line. They f riled to make the point after on an attempted place' ■kick. The rest of the game was iplayed near the center of the field until Portland took the ball to the twelveyard line as the g.ime ended. The locals go to Van Wert. Ohio. : Sit day to play the Buckeye Independents. Lineup and Summary: Decatur Portland Frrl Brown LE ißaer Class LT Smith Hurst LG Hammit Marbaugh € Cletter ■Murphy RG Green ■ Gass RT Chittin Str.'tebunner RE Smith : Bell QB Flemming I Brfede LH .... Bray j Debolt RH Koltton C. Brown FB Frakes Substitutions: Zerkle. Coftee. I Engle, Beery, Snedeker, Hylhird, '
Pigskin Pilots By HARDIN BURNLEY - —IFIELD S £NEf ? A LS J ;Chuck \ MASKWHICH V°Ji; KoTteE DAMES candidate: roe. - \ //? ALL -AMERICA \ kM\ r a y Mmf * I SPolzr mcv > ! euG *"* CliffMoNTSowEiey -OF COLUMBIA” OF THE OEST TERBACKS IAJ THE WHO HAS DONE JOB IN PILOTING -ITTLES LIONS f Syndicate, Inc., Great Britain rights reserved
THE importance of the quarterback in gridiron contests cannot be overstressed. The choice of plays on the part of the held general often decides a game, and if any particular play fails to pan out well, the "grandstand quarterbacks” take great delight in telling everyone who will listen just what play thould have been called. Sideline strategists should re- i member that doping out the merits ot a 'day after the event is very difficult from the actual job of quarterbacking in the heat of the game's action The field general ia an Motive player who has to endur» the gruelling pace to which all gi.dmen are subjected in a game, and he roust decide on hia strategy on uie'i
(Gage, Onrlor; Portland, Rhodes. . Officials; Beal, referee: Cole I Head linesman. ! Score by quarters Decrtur —6 0 0 —6 | Portland —0 0 0 p—o JEFFERSON WINS ■ FRIDAY NIGHT Jefferson high school had little, i trouble defeating Hartford township Friday night at Berne, defeating the Gorillas by a onesided score. 51 to 12. Jefferson took the, lead early in the game and increasj ed ths margin. j Egly was high scorer with IS 'points. Anderson led the Hartford team with five points. Jefferson also won the preliminary game, 40 I to 7. Lineup and summary: Jefferson FG FT TP .Egly. f X 2 IX ' Moran, f 6 1 13 .Miller, c. 5 0 10 I Foreman, g 3 2 X Charleston, g 1 0 2 j Bo.lenbacher. g. 0 o o Totals .. .. . .23 5 51 Hartford FG FT TP | Kifier, f. 11 3 Anderson, f. .... 2 1 5 Meshberger, c. 1 0 2 I Clark, g. 0 0 0, Meshberger. g. 1 o 2 ■Ballinger, g. 0 0 ol Totals 5 2 12 Referee: Lehman. Berne. - — 0 | BARGAINS — Bargains in Living Room, Dining Room Suites, Mat tresses and Ruga. Stuckey and Co ■ Monroe, our phone number is 44 ct. o I Get the Habit Trade, at Hume
spur of the moment, as each new situation comes up. Among the outstanding quarterbacks of the year, for generalship and all-around value, one must include the names of Charles “Chuck” Jaskwhich, of Notre Dame, and Cliff Montgomery, of Columbia’s Lions. Jaskwhich was marked by the late Knute Rocknc as a brilliant | prospect back in 1930, when the ?'reat Carideo was calling signals or the Irish. This year, after a somewhat shaky start, he is living up to his early promise. Smart football men say he is a very good back. Tom Lieb, Loyola coach and a former Notre Dante man. has called him “the finest player I have 1 seen in many a moon.”
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1932.
KIRKLAND IS LOSER FRIDAY inaccuracy from the free throw line spelled defeai for Kirkland Friday night, the Lancaster Bobcats | from Wells county nosing out the Kangaroos on the Kirkland floor. 12 jto 11. KirklacT reared only five • 01-its on fi. teen chances from the | foul line, while the Wells comity I five nv de six of their nine ch /nccn good. The game was close and hard (fought all the way. with only one I point sepuratki* the teams most of the game. Lancaster lei at the half, ;6 to 5. Kirkland led at 11-10 in the ,g miniHet of the game but ISh dy strgged his only field goal of (the game to put Lancaster in the ! lea L In a preliminary game the Kirk- ! 1 .nd seconds defeated the Lancaster resrves, 17 to It). I Lineup aid summary: Kirkland FG FT TP I Scherry if 1 2 4 Augsburger f 0 0 ft Martin, c ........ . 1 2 4 Spew ger g 1 0 2 Beavers, g 0 11 Totals 3 5 11 Lancaster Eichhorn f .. . . .. 0 2 2 Shady. f 124 Collier c Oil Myers, g 113 R. Lesh. g 0 0 0 Lytly, f 1 o 2 B. Lesh. g .... 0 0 0 Wibel f 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 12 Referee: Chambers. Fort Wayne. ARMISTICE DAY RIOT IN DUBLIN CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ; the violent rioting of Armistice day. More than 1.000 members of the Irish Republican army paraded the streets yesterday afternoon in their customary antiarmistice •demonstration. Police charged them with batons every few minutes, and many were taken to hospitals. It was the wildest, most riotous
' Jaskwhich has stiff competition for the quarterback berth in the • person of Laurie Vejar. another of > Notre Janie’s many great backs. > Cliff Montgomery, Lou Little’s I pride and joy. played brilliantly in ( several of Columbia's big games last fall; and he is keeping up his , 1931 pace this season. A will-o’-the-wisp in a broken field, a splendid , forward passer, a good kicker, and . strong enough to run interference , for his backfield mates, "Columbia . Cliff” is a genuine triple threat, aswell as a high-class strategist who leaves little to be desired in running the team. He has been perhaps the biggest factor in Columbia's success so far this season * CopyrifM ; King Fcatur** Syndicate, in*
Champion > t I *OO . ■LW wJ? 4 '*** JI ♦ 1 a* ".I • Carl Seiler.' left-handed Knox County, 111., farmer, who estale iished a new world s record by winning the national cutliliusklug title from seventeen other contestants. The contest was held at Galva. 111. Seiler s total, especially remarkable in the face of handicaps and mud and cold, was 36.914 bushels in 80 minutes. The former record was 35.8 bushels. Armistice day in years. Traffic: was completely disorganized as singing, yelling mobs filled the: streets. Police wielded their batons during the afternoon to disperse youths who burned a union jack in O’Connell street after parading a::d snatching poppies from pedestrians. Wearers of the poppies fought with the snatchers and lively general fighting ensued. Civic guards restored order during the evening, but early today the trouble broke out again. Police put a cordon around the center of the city and all civic guards Jn the Dublin area were mobilized. Many demonstrators carried “knuckle dusters’* or other small.: handy weapons and engaged ini frequent hand-to-hand fighting with polite, shouting. "Up Repub-i lie." Stores were wrecked and, automobiles held up and attacked: in many sections. Police after clashing with the demonstrators for four hours, i fired blank shots to disperse them' and made some arrests. Many’ women and children were tramnl-' ed when the rioters fled. Acci-I d» t wards of the hoepifals were I crowded with patients. > - o Clover Not Always Valued Sweet clover a roadside weed a few years ago. today Is a crop of eonsido hie ecomuni' importance fr> the •• -
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Ry HARRISON CARROLL. Cuu/ligbt. lljz. Kuig heal urea RyndHate, Inc HOLLYWOOD, Cal.. Every producer in Hollywood is excited over the fact that Marie Dressier, Wallace Beery or Alison Skipworth can outdraw nearly all of the glanaorous youngsters °n the screen. And being excited, they are doing things about it. Fox has put I Henrietta CroaL **«* f man under con-1 < J tract and is ■KI. buying Jerry Horwin's origina I story. "Momnier,” for SwK her first star- " ring picture. Henrietta T ° k those ° f Crosman you * ho s “ w th * screen version of “The Royal Family of Broadway,” Miss Crosman needs no introduction. She played the gallant old trouper, Fanny Cavendish, who carried on to the very end. Appropriately, her first picture for Fox also is to have a theatrical background and, so far, there’s little else to be told about it. Director and supporting cast will be selected later. Maybe you’ve heard the story before, but Bert Kalmar told it the other day with great success. Two men were sawing a log with one of those cross-saws One of them was a husky brute and the other small and weazened. As they
HOAGLAND BEATS MONMOUTH. 43-8 I Hoagland handed the Monmouth ifive a one-sided beating Friday night at Hoagland. 43 to 9. Hoaglland led from the first minute of play and the game was never in 'doubt. Bohnke starred for the wininers with 16 points. Hoagland also won the preliminary game, downing the Monmouth seconds, 27 to 10. Lineup and summary: Hoagland FG FT TP Gresley, f. ........... . ..... 2 15; 1 Fry, f 3 0 6] Bohnke. c. 7 2 16' i Schroder, g. 2 2 6, , Oehler, g. 10 2, Hoffman, f. .... 2 0 4; Hobbs, f. 2 0 4 Totals 19 5 431 Monmouth FG FT TP • Fuelling, f Oil ' Merica, f. Oil Singleton, c. 0 0 0 Muerde. g 0 2 2 ! Heckman, gll 3 Hoile, g 1 0 21 | Franz, g. .0 0 0 Hobrok, g. 0 0 01 Totals . 2 5 1 Referee: Himer, Harlan. o |1 St. Marv’s Defeats I * U. C. L. A., 14 to 7 Los Angeles. Nov. 12.—(U.R) —A|] .blistering, razor-edge drive from j midfield late in the final quarter ieliminated another football team | from national championship con-', sideration yesterday when the gal- ( loping Gaels from St. Mary’s end ed the winning streak of the Uni- i' versify of California at Los Ano geles. 1 1 Behind the flying feet of little. Bill Beasley, the Gaels gal’oped to ' ( their winning touchdown. The final score was St. Marv’s 14, U. C. L. A.. 7. 0 ROSCOE TURNER HALTS FLIGHT I continued from page one the same ship in which he hopped off today. Turner has mr|e several im provements on the plane and in the last few weeks in trial spins established new round-trip speed records between Los Angeles and San Francisco and Los Angeles' and San Diego. REPUBLICANS CLAIM CONTROL CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE votes are counted cu: the tenth day : after the election, or before if all returns are in. Count of the Denver mail I; Hots will begin Sunday. One-( , third of the state’s vote is massed , in Denver. I The United Press cowst is com!plete save for the absentee ballots a: 1 two of the stite’s 1.539 pre-' ■ ci nets. I o SC HUG FUNERAL RITES MONDAY j CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE : I was he din high esteem by his ' many friends. He had represented the Miller; I Brothers Hardware company of' Richmond for a number of years, j 1 re'iring six years ago on account
bent back and forth, a big Irishman watched with growing disapproval. Finally he went over and gave the big fellow a terrific blow in the jaw. As the victim looked up in a daze, he snapped: "If the little man wants the saw, let him have it!” Katharine Hepburn comes back with the news that the latest craze ' m Faris society is a game called “scavengers.” The hostess sends | out invitations for cocktails at 4 F M When the guests arrive, how ever, they are given a paper list in- 1 atea d of drinks. *J n the list are t * le names of 16 . * ' articles. The quests are then told to go out and get these f ■’ things—if they H-fail, they don’t ■ K et dinner. The object is 10 m a k e 1 h * quest as difficult ISJjj as possible. The £ ' list may include . F 9/ \ ■ movie star’s •—— —— — autograph, a Katharine F‘ vln K brick, a Hepburn [ ttr » certain brand of applesauce, rare flowers, cheeses or anything out of the ordinary. One famous Parisian hostess thought to stump a guest by demanding the most brilliant man in Paris. But the guest took her troubles to the phone-book. At the appointeu time, she returned with a man named Jean Brilliant. I
Her Son for President ■ A ngHML . A 1 'l®, - A" t i ' i I w - '■ j . Mbu... SIS I Here is Mrs. Sarah Delano Roosevelt about to do something no other woman in American history has done—vote for her own son for President of the United States. The aged mother of the President-elect is shown at the polling place at Hyde Park. New York, where Governor Roosevelt and his wife later cast their ballots. — ■
of failing health. He leaves to mourn his death, his widow, children grandson and brother. host of nieces ami nephews, his many friends and business associates. STARTS RETURN TO WASHINGTON CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE House, however, a-nd be pre [sired to take up several important National ( and internatioaal problems immediately upon his return. It was believed the revision of his schedule, leaving Palo Alto a day earlier than planned, was due to the President’ll desire to get ba< k ' to Wachingftiire and eheck cm a move to reduce war debts. Richey insisted, however that
■■■ — - — Sensational Halfbacks ■ By HARDIN BURNLEY ® _ ” FIELDS trtar | y "'hi /»M I I / > ■ 151 1' I u whela.*i ■ HELLER ■•brilliant r 6 R ball a-. I cAieeiEfc. H AMD r X ' jUOs W (H 2 FOOU/AI2.D ~a > > PASS ’T <V- i EXPERT ” r j®' of the : ,> • Pittsburgh ■ * -- — eleven MK ■ aR ••A STRONG •'••'••• ■ W_|fc^W§W > ' BWcffl candidate G7T7f"t" toe all- T IAI -'t M(0)S A ' AMERICAN ■ ~™ , w ’\“~TsV'X I t BACK j '. oeEaoAl 3 W]| Grew Bntiw rightfiMceJ 'j3W
ALREADY the demon AllAmerica selectors are sharpening their pencils and scribbling down the names of leading candidates for the coveted berths on the mythical eleven. ‘ What a job they will have this year in choosing two halfbacks for the 1932 "all” team out of the galaxy of hip-twisting ball carriers and sensational broken field runners now performing on the various teams! Let’s see—there’s Heller, Pittsburgh’s wonderful back: Fields of the Army, who is rated with Stecker and Cagle as a ball carrier by enthusiastic West Pointers; Jack Crickard, Harvard's great halfback; Ernie Caddei of Stanford, leading West Coast candidate; Hal Moe. spark plug of the Oregon State team which invades New York
"nothing official has reached the President" on this vital matter. The special train departed from the Palo Alto Station, 'across the road from the board, picturesque campus of Leland Stanford university, at 8:57 last night. Mr. a id Mrs. Hoover seemed in happy a; irits as they bid good bye to a group of old friends and neighbors who accompanied them to the station. o 1— Four Bandits Rob Bank Messengers Little Rock Ark., Nov. 12—(UP) -Four men in i large sedan bear- ■ Ing aa IRaaols license, slugged, kidnaped and robbed two bank mes sengers of more than $4,000 in the downtown se.tio.i heir today.
next week to take on Fordham; Pug Rentner, last year’s All-America halfback, who is still gaining those yards for Northwestern; Don Zimmerman. another 1931 sensation, wtr has been keeping up the good wora inis year at Tulane; and there are Lukats and Koken and Sheeketski of Notre Dame—l could go on like this for hours. Not having to worry just now as to which of these belong as AllAmerican halfbacks, let’s consider the many merits of Warren “Fats” Heller, the guy who puts the bite in the Panthers’ gridiron attack. Mr. Heller is everything on a football field that his name implies. You vould have to go a long way to find his equal in the matter of com- i bining running and passing skill. He throws a ball fifty yards with a short flip of his arm; and against
REt) 1 ■'ssistMß Kaht 1 ; Tr "' ! I’-uihiitiz fi ■ ;! • '■ ■■>• 'r h,.| •. ■ fciaz r I”' 11 : -.01 Mrs. WaittJ|* rl Ism i A THOUGHT onTriTday 1 If ! 'W v?'" '' y°» andp Wi ' “T-ades ZIF ’"l ! <l-aih, p ls i- ■■ wimt-hwM sILEIX : ''' *'*’• ~ sSSjS .'ine I Ol ' throbißg. Zb A ' " t( '»Tis a -C Ke i» e Thai wa , .j,,,! ,„ r 8,, ~y ' Ard l4 '' 1 ' t J NOTICE p 2" ' N " ’■ TMu.Jy t°, “ s ' idulaker mMI. ■ ■ ■ Wi - ; l< ’ ' y.-« .MHS
the Army he complet d to Reider while on the « (jcW( jl | which insured I J o b un ds Heller weighs 170 P‘ ou Cd considered by I lttb to Nt the best “ roi n Hr the history of the volley ygg quite as e ) u , slve ..? r .„ h Toni rier as Gibby 'J ' Jj'. p e H“ rt - Toby Uansa or Jin>m> he can do more thing- I 1 of them. a.n.r’s I Paul Reider. He' ' r ‘ p , tI WB and captain of tne eleven, is a very good ° the PFB He ia the hghust J- » _, f toO ■ thers’ backfield- a _but*B perhaps, for real K rta . jn , er fer<'■■ m nevertheless “ d >, n *"’ erß ;,edWß and a magnetic ■ the signals from -nc M position. b ,ji»u. "* M cUrrwst iMI f 1
