Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 2, Decatur, Adams County, 3 January 1933 — Page 6
Page Six
StoBIS
TONS BEAT PANTHERS IN ANNUAL GAME Soul he r n California Proves Too Strong For Pitt In Rose Tourney I’.i ;ulena. Calif.. Jan. 3.—(U.R) Th' great football juggernaut of, lb' University of Southern Calif ■ i ! a. today claimed its second I c . i ;eciitive national championship. > !■ ■ < d an unbroken string of 20 victories and pointed to a record ' > iijig won tour Tournament of; Il s?s games in as many starts, rinse honors were predicated on F U, to 0 walloping the Trojans I dealt in the annual rose bowl game i to t lie previously unbeaten Univer-; si y of Pittsburgh team, rated one I of the strongest in the country. The game was the most decisive ' in tournament history, exceeding c en Southern California's 47 to 1-1 ; victory over Pitt in the 193(1 con I os’. Pit: really seemed not so much , on-classed as the score indicated. : Rut Southern California played in- I spired football, scoring* on sheer power when that was necessary I and meantime taking advantage of < eve-y bobble the Panthers made. Two of the five touchdowns resulted from long drives. Three; were turned in when the alert | Westerners took advantage of Pitt I mistakes. Pitt reached scoring territory “ Onlv twice. Ernie Smith, Southern California ■ tackle, and Warren Heller. Panth- i or halfback, both of whom were 1 s. ’ cted on several all-America I r-nus, were the standouts. It was through holes opened by > Smith that Trojan backs cantered to their greatest gains on running ploys while Pitt made no yardage ".•er his position. Meantime he; plat e-kicked for the point after ouchdown four times in as many ( tres. Heller left the field late in the fin 1 quarter, a bruised but unbeat- < u il’-American, carrying with him :• s’irring ovation from the 84,000 •ctators in tribute to his great <D naive work and his final ball '■ i crying. I TWSK®WL Me ’’q h ■ 'war The Pitt Panthers certainly ; feel that the Rose Bowl me of yesterday was slightly -.named. The Trojans from i horn California certainly fill hat bowl with thorns for Pitt yes, Soul hern California won . ‘ to 0. 000 Well. well, we get to pick on . old friend Buck this week. k. the conductor of Out of nds in the Bluffton News-Ban-brings his Tigers over here battle with the Yellow .Jackets 1 '.v night. 000 The regular conductor of his column has threatened all "’rts of dire things if we don’t cost his Yellow Jackets this "zeek. That shouldn’t be hard tn do. We have always sorta iked these Yellow Jackets, even if we had sometimes to hide that fact down deep. 000 Regardless of your feelings, that ■
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i rcallv should be quite a ball game ' IT id!i.. night. The Tigers haven't [ been doing so well thus tar hut ; win, knows, maybe limy made ‘ some New Year resolutions. They ' have some basketball in their I systems, as is evidenced by the ■ fact that thev held both Hartford ; City and South Side to scant vie 1 torics. nOn BEAT BLUFFTON. 000 i The charity dmilflelteader plav■ed at Fort Wayne last, night i attracted a large crowd South : Side defeated Central in the openi ing game. 21 to 18. and Nurlh Side trimmed f'-*ntc:<l < Tlbnlii- in the windup game. 37 to 29. 000 As a football windup, the West. ; All Stars defeated the all star ; eleven from the eas' by a 21 to !13 score Monday in the annual ehaiity game at San Francisco. I Three Indiana players appeared in ! the Fast s lineup, Moss anil Horst- ; man of Purdue and Kurth of . Notre Dame. 000 Shades of the past! The MonI roe team of 1922 defeated the 1 Monroe Bearkatz Saturday night, |IS to 1(5. Th game was played at | the Decatur gym. It was a battle I all the way, with the alumni scorI ing the winning basket, in the fin!al minute. Perhaps the names of ; these alumni will jog your mem'ory. Martz. Andrews. C. Kessler j and It. Kessler. Everhart. Harvey I and Hendricks. In a preliminary I game, another alumni defeated the ; Monroe seconds. 36 to 4. 000 HEAT BLUFFTON. 000 Announcement was made today ; that the Decatur A. C. will play I the Huntington independent team | at the high school gym Wednes-' . day night. The Huntington team! I is composed of former high school! ! stars and the lineup includes th“( 'Hosier brothers and the Rudicell ' brothers, stars of the Huntington • high school team during the past; several seasons. The local team j will hqld a practice session tonight at 9 o'clock. 000 Principals of the Adams county high schools are scheduled to meet tonight to make definite plans for the annual county first team tourney. Tentative plan: call for the tourney to be held Saturday. January 28, although 1 there has been some talk of cancelling the meet this year. JEFFERSON IS LOSER MONDAY The Monmouth Rockets defeated the Jefferson Independents in a slow game Monday night at Monmouth. 27 to 19. The entire Rocket ' squad appeared in the lineup. Fleming and Brokaw were outstanding f.>r the Rockets, while Stuber and Wendel were best for he losers. Rockets (27) FG FT TP , Moses, f. 3 0 8 ;L. Brokaw, f. ....... 1 () 2 Case. f. n 0 o I Lytle, f. 0 0 0 F. Brokaw, c 4 19 Fleming, g 4 0 8 Hill, g. 1-0 2 Miller, g. 0 0 0 Bittner, g. 0 0 0 I Friend, g. 0 0 0 Totals 1,3 1 27 Jefferson (19) FG FT TP Stuber, f 3 17 Wendel, f 3 17 Bollcnbacher, < 11 3 | Baker, g 0 0 0 Smitly, g 10 2 Totals 8 3 19 Referee: Red Johnson. Dance Moose Home .Wed. VMMh—— ... :
I atM .twas ■ m u i« ——— Track Heroes oj 1932 By BURNLEY— —— —— — (BSF) K F < J 'ATMLOM Jggjfe c.'sooaje/S! / di ( fid j X X- ; r best \ A \g/ f /' W ! AIL’AROUAJD \ \ 1 ,athlete; f [EDDIE x ' i OU OW® m J,® W» /Ww -was o i Fl /ff we J re ack ■ ;¥ o £ u t vof' | SILU '' 3 ** LAST YEAR£ 400-METEfS seajsatioaj max’ compete IM THE SPfSIAJTS TRIS SEASOM! i ® 19}J ’ Fcan “« Inc. Crru BricainTbhß
THE Olympic Games were of course the feature of the 1932 track and field activities, and I the big hero of the games was little Eddie Tolan, winner of both sprint events, who took the leading place beside those other Olympic double champions. Babe Didrikson and . Helene Madison, the swimming >tar. both of whom captured two titles. Eddie’s victory over Ralph Met calfe in the 100 meters was widely questioned, most of the spectators being of the opinion that Metcalfe was the winner. The moving pictures of the finish failed to settle •he dispute, but Tolan was officially I called the w inner and you can’t take his laurels away from him. The chunky Midnight Express ran away from Metcalfe in the 200 meters to win this event decisively and there can be no doubt that Eddie is a worthy champion. 78th INDIANA ASSEMBLY WILL OPEN THURSDAY CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE | was reported favored for the post: ’ of senate secretary. James Morrissey. Peru, was said to be the outstanding candi- : | date for chief doorkeeper of the : i senate. 'j John Ryan. Lafayette.and Nath--1 an Cobbs. Mulberry, are seeking ' i the post of chief house clerk. ' | Clyde Snoddy, Bloomington, is a '' candidate for the senate post--1 j mastership. Matt Leach. Cary, is said to be j favored for principal doorkeeper ,j of the house and Eddie Biggs, ,; Terre Haute, is after the assist-: ' I ’nt clerkship. o i Kid Gleason Dies > >: Philadelphia, Jun. 3 (ITP) — .AVilliam “Kid” Gleason, 67. o>ne of , the most famous and colorful figdir s in baseball’s old guard, divd at his home her last night of heart disease. 1 HYa-.n: had been ill for several I mo ths as he rounded out his s?v- --| enth y ar as coach of the Philadelphia Althletics, and his 46th year on the ilLniuiid. He entered baseball as a pitcher .back in 'B7 when players wore sldewhiskera, won great fame on the mound and later became a second baseman. He reached tlie peak of his career in 1919 when he piloted the Chicago White Sox to the American league pennant. Body Identified I Indianapolis. Jan. 3—(UP)—The I body of a woman found in a can- ■ vas bag October 2 near the National Ronq we«t of Lewisville, in Henry county has been identified and her husband arrested in connection with th- death, state police announced today. The body was that of Mrs. Margaret Baldwin. 32, of Fortville. Her husb nd. Freeman Baldwin, 54. Is being held In Hancock county jail at Greenfield without charge pending the grand jury Investigation. Police said he refused to talk.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JANI >>,
The Olympic track and field events produced many heroes, but space permits the mention of only a few. The greatest all-around athlete of 1932 was Jim Bausch, the big boy who copped the gruelling Olympic Decathlon events. Not content with athletic versatility. Big Jim at last reports was nursing ambitions to become a radio crooner. and probably will challenge Rudy Vallee and Bing Crosby to a crooning decathlon before long. Perhaps the most brilliant single race of the 1932 track year was the record-breaking victory of little Bill Carr in the Olympic 400 meter race Carr beat hack a desperate bid for victory on the part of Big Ben Eastman, to establish his undisputed supremacy over the blond Stanford flash on the 400-meter route, and his great performance stamps him as the best of all time at that distance. JAPS OCCUPY ~ CHINESE CITY Japanese Troops Complete Occupation of Shanhaikwan Today Changchun, Manchuria, Jan. 3.— (U.R) —Japanese occupation of Shanhaikwan was completed at 8 p. m. today after Chinese proposed that fighting cease, according to reports received by Manchukuo officials here. Negotiations for an amicable settlement of the encounter between Japanese and Chinese troops I were reported under way. I An official statement issued outlined the Shanhaikwan incident as ! follows: “After increasing tension around ’ Shanhaikwan, Chinese bombed and fired on the Japanese gendarmerie office at the Shanhaikwan station , Sunday night. A Japanese detach- : ment proceeded to the south gate .of the walled city and demanded 1 an explanation. “The detachment was fired on, ‘and one lieutenant was killed and 'ltwo privates wounded. Reinforcements then were sent to Shanhalk wan and warships were dispatched J from Port Arthur, while Japanese airplanes dropped two small bombs 'jon Shanhaikwan.” ’ All fighting apparently had ceasat Shanhaikwan at 6:30 p. m, today. It was anticipated that the Japanese would insist on extension of the Chinchow neutral zone southward and the withdrawal ol I Chinese troops, as they demanded ?! at Shanghai. ■ Shanhaikwan has been chiefly a - garrison city for Chinese troops li commands an entrance intc 1 Manchuria by land and to the Gull i of Chihli by sea. It is strategical!) ■ important to the Japanese if the) decide to extend their operation’ ■ either north or south. The ami) controlling Shanhaikwan will con i.'trol the Peiping Mukden railroad Lamp Burns 24 Years Fort Worth, Tex. —(UP)—Abovi :. the stage entrance of a theater hen
It is rumored, by the way, that Carr will turn to sprinting this year, as it is known that Lawson Robertson thinks that Carr is potentially as great a sprinter as he is a quarter-miler. Other remarkable track and field performances of 1932 which must be mentioned in any summary of lart year’s sport highlights were Leo Sexton’s record-busting Olympic shot-put heaves. Babe Didrikson’s remarkable track and field triumphs. Kusocinski’s great distance running Zabala's Olympic marathon triumph and Hampson's 800-metcr victory. Then there was that memorable finish of the Olympic 5.000-meter race when K»q>h Hill unsuccessfully tred to /• r past the zig-zag-ging I.rhtincn in a neck-and-neck duel, which rt-silded in a disputed victory t»r the Finni sh runner CwynaM I».J Kl,.| »Sn.JlrtU. Ine an electric lamp with a carbon filament has burned continually for 24 years. Barry Burke, now a shows m ,n in Minneapolis, then an electrician here, hung the lamp in 19( 8 when the Opera House first opened its doors. Its burning is closely ! watched, for there’s a tradition that . when the lamp flickers out. so will Barry Burke. —o . — Zoercher Is Chosen 'lndiainapolis, Jan. 3—(UP) Philip Zoercher. Indianapolis, was electI e<i chairman of the state tax board ; today succeeding James Showalter, 3 Wabash. 8 Showalter will remain on the g board as a commissioner. I Zoercher. a Democrat, is tl»e first member of that party to be chairg man of the tax board since it was created in its present form in 1919. His election was interpreted as “ a gesture of goodwill towards the II incomr-’.g Democratic adminlstrae tion. He has been on the board for n 15 years. 1 ' o - 1 ” Schedule roitijjn Cage Garnet Topeka. Kan. (UP) — Washburn College has two games with “• foreign teams listed on its basketball schedule. The Ichabods meet ” the F. A. L. team of Mexico City • here, Jan. 14, and entertai , a Jipanese team from Meiji University e Tok io, Feb. 1 l- ■ Sleep All Night i. —Every Night — Make This 25c Test — I Don t wake up for bladder relief. Physic the bladder as you would the bowels. Drive out im- • purities and excessive acids which cause the irritation resulting in •' wakeful nights, leg pains, back- ; ache, burning and frequent desire. . BUKETS. the bladder physic, | made from buchu, juniper oil, etc., works effectively on the bladder 7i as castor oil on the bowls. Get a • j regular 25c box and after tour ’ days it not relieved of getting up nights your druggist will return your money. Make this test. You are bound to feel better after this cleansing and you get your regue > lar sleep. Holthouse Drug Co sav is a best seller. y
WOMANPARTY LEADER DIES Mrs. Henrv Moskowitz, I Friend of Prominent ! Democrats, Dies Moni.av New York. j7T7 (U.R) - >'• 1 Henry Moskowitz, confidential advisor to Alfred K. Smith, wa ■ mourned today by Democratic part’, leaders, by thousands of iriendatid ro-workers, and by the poor tu, whom she had devoted hei life. She died yesterday, the friend Oi Governor Herbert IL Lehman-President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, and many other leading Democrats. She was credited with much; of the strategy that gave Smith the Democratic presidential nomin-ati-on in 1928. Mrs. Moskowitz fell down the stairs in her home several weeks ago. Both arms were broken. The] shock weakened her and she contracted pneumonia, but was recov-i ering when her heart weakened? Last week she suffered her first heart attack. The second caused death. Smith was at the inaugural cere-,
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