Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 38, Decatur, Adams County, 14 February 1933 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
WKS ***“' 'Will
A. C.’S PLAY FORT WAYNE CHIEFS HERE Strom? Fort Wayne Team Will Battle Decatur Here Thursday Announcement was made 1 -’v that the Decatur A.i .’s v II play the Fort Wayne < ’ ’el’s at the D. 11. S. gym 'J t "-;<lav night. n t'is is undoubtedly the outstanding attraction of the • '■<>•> for independent bask lludl. as the Chiefs boast < n<> of the strongest teams ii> National Professional !e ■ >c this season. 1 ending the visitors will be p a. Miller, a former Hoosier and Chicago player of the old pro-1 foss’onal league, and well known Ih’Tuighout this part of the conn t'-v as a basketball and baseball star. O'her members of the team are S'aek and Evard. formerly with tbo Fort Wayne General Electric c’iih Krull and Lindenberg; for nerly with the Hoosiers under the rookie rule. Baker and Franke. ■ former Central high school stars end later with various amateur clubs around Fort Wayne. bi a letter sent to the management of the A. C.'s, the Chiefs sne-.'ested that Decatur “look n-o" >d and sign up a few really good players for your club so yon can give us some opposition." Tim A. C.’s feel that regardless o l ' the experience and ability of the Chiefs, that the locals can ! r’vo' them a real battle and no loading up of players wvill be necessary.
Fair Golfers in Florida Woman golf stars \ COMPETING /N FLORIDA Mgr \ th/s wwr#'-’ *<a/ M‘SS FISHWICK, MUSS GARNHAM AND THE OTHFR X ■. INVADING BRITISH GIRLS 1/jF ■ 1 GIVE AM INTERNATIONAL Wf/< I Flavor To THE Winter. Wf < H / TOURNE/S. w C'Jau reen -Orcutt- //-4*-r FAMOUS NEW JERSEY // f [ GOLFER.-SHE HAS // Lt V BEEN REMARKABLY WAZtM BjjjUjK'. SUCCESSFUL IM s '-• * I WMBfak WINNING PAST . 1/ I IBMjMf FLORIDA TOURNEYS! // I V r- i / - ) DIANA IS ? Zr' aa” RATED the 3 rd J X riiss Zy ■ '■• i ranking y / [>• , W ! j < English ■> f uiana #• / tpww ( WOMAN J f ■Hp' zf -Fishwick- ~ "Young BRITISH GOLF STAR AND FORMER HOLDER OF THE BRITISH WOMEN'S TITLE*
NOT until next month is half over will anyone be able to say whether the visit of the English women golfers was worth that long trip across the briny for Miss Diana Fishwick and the five colleagues who accompanied her. The present tournament at Palm Beach is only in the way of a warmup for the ladies, and if none of them manages to cop the Florida championship there are still three more title tourneys in which they plan to carry on. It will be recalled that when Diana Fishwick, then British women’s champion, came here in 1931, her showing was poor and she was disappointed. Now she is-third tanking player in Britain, and she hopes to do belter.
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Burkhead Loses Herman Burkhead, Decatur welterweight,' was eliminated in the first round of the Golden Gloves tourney at the G. E. dub in Fort i Wayne, Monday night. Burkhead i dropped the decision to Harold Rim- , mel of Kendallville. | Burkhead was the only Decatur i entrant to box last night, Eddie I and Garth Anderson and Paul Con rad being scheduled to tight later, j 3 Gaines Carded The St. .Toe eighth grade team I has three games scheduled this week, all on the home floor and on i successive days. The first game ’ will be played Wednesday aftpr,noon with the Hoagland eighth as the’opposition. Thursday | New H'.ven will play hero and Will | I shire. Ohio, will furnish the oppo- | : sit ion Friday. Each game will be played at 4 - o’clock in the afternoon. A small admission price of five cents will be charged. War Opened on Ants . Meridian. Miss.-(U.2) —Campaigns ' Ito wipe out Argentine ants have been launched in 41 towns through- ; out this section. The state plant board is assisting the campaigns i by providing funds. - o Blast Uncovered Volcanic Rim |i Redmond, Ore. —(UP) —A coun-ii ty road crew set off a minor dyna-! mite blast at Cinder Butte, near i here, to obtain cinders for highway construction and got more cinders ! than anticipated. The hill started gushing hot cinders and smoke. The edge of a volca.iic rim was uneovlered. o Winter Sports Gain Way Government Camp. Mount Hood. Ore.— (U.R) —Winter sports are in | full swing here, following a heavy i snowfall.
And why not? The records show that golf champions rarely do well on their first visits to foreign shores. What they do later is another matter. Take the Americans who have gone abroad for their initial attempts at alien laurels: Bobby Jones, Glenna Collett Vare, Jerry Travers, Chick Evans, Francis Ouimet are some who Jid dismally on their first tries. And then there was the case of Cyril Tolley, British amateur champion, who bounced over in 1920 for a fling at the American title, and promptly bounced back when he failed even to qualify. The English Amen golfers are welt received at the tournament? this year. They lend color and interest to the mat"hes and an inter national flavor is always relished by the sane. The business of ama-
0 H Tlie Decatur A. C.’s will open the weeks basketball schedule for Decatur teams Thursday night, meeting the Fort Wayne Chiefs at D. H. S. gym —-000 — This game should prove a real I attraction as the Chiefs boast one |of the strongest semi-professiona) teams in the country this year. InI eluded in the lineup are I’alph Mil|ler, well known basketball and baleball star-of Fort Wayne and Byron ; Evard. former Central Catholic and St. Viators star. —oOo — The Decatur high school teams each play one game this week. —oOo— The Commodores play at home (Friday night, meeting the Ossian Bears from Weils county. Ossian defeated the Commodores in an early season game at Ossian. 23 Ito 12, and the locals will be ont to leven tip the season's score. —oOo— The Yellow Jackets travel to Garrett to play the Railroaders in a Northeastern Indiana conference battle. Garrett, although getting away to a bad start this season, have improved considerably the past few weeks, holding victories over the Bluffton Tigers and Ketida’lvllle Comets as outstanding victories. —oOo— After this week, only one more game remains on the regular schedule of each team. The Commodores will play Central Catholic of Fort Wayne here next Monday night, February 20. The Yellow Jackets close the season with the Kendallville Comets appearing here Friday, February 24. —oOo — After these games. l>oth local
teur standing, which tended to cloud the arrival of Miss Fishwick, has been dispelled and the play is on. The Americans are looking to great things from Maureen Orcutt of New Jersey, who seems to be having things her own way on the Florida'links. In the last two years Miss Orcutt has won in the majority of the Winter tournaments in which she competed. Miss O. S. Hill is another fair lady of the links who is hard to beat in these tourneys. 1 Following the current Florida championship tournament, the Eng- ■ lish golfers will play at Ormond Beach in the South Atlantic championship, at St. Augustine in the Florida East Coast championship I and in the Bellear tournament. Cop yr Uhl, ISIS, Klo« k'Mturw Syndicate, inc.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 11, 1933
teams will settle down to work for 'I the tournaments. The Commo'dores will compete in the annual state Catholic tournament at InIdianapolis, February 24 and 25. The I drawing for this meet will be made |at Indianapolis this coming Satnrtday night. —oOo—- | Ohio State maintained its un-I .hrkone victory record in Big Ten | . basketball last night but only after the toughest kind a battles rom Illinois. Ohio State won, 31 to 29, in an overtime period. In other. Big Ten games, Purdue defeated i Chicago, 41 to 21. Michigan downed I Indiana, 32 to 2;>, lowa whipped ' Wisconsin, 31 to 25 and Northwestern defeated Minnesota, 41 to 25. —oOc — The Hartford City Airdales shot back into the lead in the Northeastern Indiana conference by defeating South Side last week while Auburn was losing to North Side. Hartford Cfty has now completed its , conference schedule with eight victories and one defeat. —oOo— Auburn can do no better than gain a tie for top honors, and the! I Red Devils must defeat Columbia' (City next week to accomplish this. No other team in the conference jhas a chance to tie the Airdales. [ i j —oOo—i! The North Side Redskins proved tithe sensation of last week's condference games, scoring victories! over Auburn and South Side on! successive nights The Hartford City victory over South Side was > the only other conference game played. —oOo— The complete standing, showing, games won. games lost and games yet to play, follows: , City W. L. * Hartford City S 1 0 . Auburn 71 1 North Side . . ..... 4 2 3 South Side 5 4 0 Central ......... 4 5 0 Decatur 3 4 2 Buff ton 2 5 2 Columbia City 2 5 2 Garrett 2 6 1 Kendallville 15 3, *To be played. —oOo — Conference games scheduled this week are: Friday: Decatur at Garrett. Bluffton at Kendallville. Columbia City at North Side. < Saturday : North Side at Kendallville. — 0 Ex-Mayor Broke Window Pendleton. Ore. —(UP)—Ex-May-or Lee McAtee took a lusty practice swing with a golf club in a sporting goods store here. The clubhead-left the shaft, sped through the front door end shattered a plate glass window. 30 by 60 inches. o Thief Stole Milk and Cream Seattle — CUP) — When Mrs. G.! L. Dow saw ! young man steal two] quarts of milk and a pint of cream 1 from her back porch, she didn't ■ bother him. thinking the youth war. I hungry. However, when she saw I the youth enter a new sedan, she , called police. o Long Term Record Completed Dallas. Tex. —(U.R) —When George C. Young. Dallas postmaster, rolled down the top of his desk here Christmas day he completed a record of unbroken service on that day I for 44 years. o College Gets Unique Gifts Berkeley, Cal. — (U.R) —An oak tree, a piano, a seismograph and' $7,200 were among the gifts to the University of California acknowledged by the board of regents recently. o— Patient Runs Away Bend. Ore.—(U.R)--John McCrea. 14. ran away from his Pineville home when he didn’t want to he operated on lor appendicitis He was picked up here. o Judge Is Elected For 7th Time Great Falls, Mont. — (U.R)—Judge H. H. Ewing, elected as judge of the eighth judicial district for the seventh consecutive term, will become the ranking senior member of Montana courts in January, when he starts his 23rd year on the bench. You can borrow up to S3OO from us in any of these ways: 1. Call at office—where we i will be glad to explain / our service. 2. Phone . Telephone applications will receive prompt attention. 8. Tear out ad, write your name and address across it, and mail it to us. You will find our service prompt, courteous, confidential, nelpful and economic.-!. franklin Security Co. Over Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone 237 Decatur, Ind
FIGHTER DIES | OF INJURIES i Ernie Schaaf Dies This Morning of Injury Suffered In Bout New York Feb. 14 —(UP) — The death of Ernie Shaaf who i collapsed during a prize fight with Primo Camera was due to natmal causes and was not a result of an injury sustained in the ring, medical examiner Charles A. Norris said after completing an autopsy. Doctor Norris said exact nature of the substance pressing on Schaff’s brain would have to be determined by miclotcopic examination. New York. Feb. 14. —(U.R) —Ernie Schaaf. Boston heavyweight boxer, died today at Polyclinic hospital ' following an emergency operation jto relieve a blood clot on the brain i resulting from ids knockout Friday | night by Primo earner.l. Schaaf, 24, failed to recover from I the coma into which he was hatterled in the 13th round of the bout. An intracranial hemorrhage, caus,ed by the rupture of a blood vessel in his brain, resulted in a blood I clot on the right side of the brain. When paralysis of the loft side of j his body set in, and his condition rapidly became worse, physicians decided on an operation as the one I remaining chance to save his life. , Schaaf died at 4:15 a. in. It was believed a technical charge of homicide would be lodged against Camera, a procedure usual in such ■cases. — • * PREBLE NEWS » « Erma Mcßarnes called on Elizabeth and Mary Fuhrman Saturday. Richard Lichtensteiger of Decatur spent the week-end visiting his grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Albert Werling. Mrs. John Smith and daughter Lucile of Fort Wayne visited Mrs. Albert Werling and daughters I ver-
For A Beautiful Kitchen At No I Increase In Cost! I Rome Copper Ware I | CHROMIUM LINED I THERE’S romance about copper in the kitchen. French chefs are the acknowledged I masters of their art—far art it is. Their culinary skill is traditional — variously I J accredited to certain ingredients by those who know nothipg but the tempting I ■ delicacies when they are served. I USE COPPER UTENSILS L xl A French chef waits upon approba- UV-' 1 j£i I Ha -W. tion as eagerly as an actor. Look to ’ AI; VX F FjF his kitchen for the implements this JH ~Wfl artist selects — ALL OF COPPER. ( < C- / Choose for vour kitchen, utensils of tS-'ISSf !\ \ /a/ X ! iT\ \ \ jiS-y this non-rusting metal recently perfccted with chromium linings, to Mixing Bowls make copper even more desirable. .XjffiOyfe Solid Copper I tensils Chromium Lined Note the beautiful shapes of these copper r « 1 pieces. You’ll proudly display them in your i kitchen. The strong, sturdy handles »re of & 1 > Tuscan Rosewood finish or brass—lining are ' i T chromium with all corners well roundtd for easy cleaning—bottoms are flat for evident SAUCE PANS htat absorption—covers are intcn hanieable on most of the pieces. NEW s jYLE DOUBLE ROH ERS WITH ( OVERS JIB WHY COPPER IS USED... <v Copper heats quickly and evenly for uni- cl ■’ ’ IB 1 Jr form cooking and fuel economy. Chrom- z’ll B |£F il,m lined copper does not affect the taste |T~ wF xS -< or co,or of the foot i cooked in it. Copper COFFEE War<? haS durabi,ity an<l a nat «ral beauty f ’ W PERCOLATORS tbat g ’ ves *t heirloom quality. ' \ DOUBLE LIPPED SAUCE PANS | WE INVITE "Y OU TO COME IN AND INSPECT THIS COPPER WARE. The Schdfer Store HARDWARE AND HOME FUR <IgHINGS
tna and Cleo Sunday. Mr and Mrs. Richard Bogner anil son Samuel of Decatur spent SunIday visiting Mr. and Mrs. Rdgat Zimmerman and daughter Onlee Mr. and Mrs, Frank Spade of Peterson visited Mr. and Mrs. Otto Dilling and family Sunday Mrs. Charles Fuhrman and daughter Elizabeth called on Mr. ami Mrs. Clarence Smith Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Eli Goldner had as their guests Sunday Mrs. John Smith and daughter Lucile and on Lawrence of Fort Mayne.
I 1 ;’, ETOFF PaAiRSofB m&KH HOgF ■ Pure Silk Hose fedfcvjl W !■// Present this certificate and 99e to help pay IgWJMp '*Jrg IEM 11/7 salespeople, advertising expenses, etc, and re- WyF Qg ’ W Wf M Oil BOX of FACE POWDER. ONE ./ »» PM «| SIOO EXQUISITE PERFUME-and we will give Vjtg/ ' gg \ K ■ Voll absolutely FREE, a beautiful 81.00 Necklace /■'// /S* . B and t«o pail ol l.adles A-S Hose—3oo needle fine V ■ 1 nsSssKssii tv 9 il member you ire, two pairs of Hosiery. 1 W j Sheet I'liitl'on or Service Weight. L—— J w v,n * XT? rt For II3P. M. to ill GWC A " ’ll 6 M- I ■ m I Onl.' W Articles I ..rnirn-iff’iur; .jJ 11 j AM) THIS AD I II IA ' nm mu l ■ 1 "" 1 iSS' 3 ’*', 9 j(k o >ly a limited number will be sold You may I Bl .-ale and set will be 'fM BP/ A) , '" !V S, ' tS 1 ertil'ieate. I® p1... Leive early. s 3M ( oupon Good Thursday i |9 I Onlv from 3to6p. m. ’|si3 WB I VITST I Articles I M shades | I THE HOLTHOUSE t| Sizes ■ «7t/V I IAI?I T P PH gW Sii,tolO>» itggrwKvwxi’i'c lIIVI It v Vz. Flesh and Brunette 99 Mail ()rde,s - A(t(| llc for un(l Packing
Pl . | c Grandstaff attended the fnneral of Dr. Frank Lose at DeeaItnr Wednesday morning. Mrs Jone Saackley anti Lorfne :.„,<| Erma Kirchner spent Wednes day at Fort Wayne Wednesday. Mrs.’ Milton Hoffman and dstlghief Betneta and sous L»-o and Osjear attended the funeral of Dr. Frank Lose Wednesday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Bnlteineier 'and family visited Mr. and Mrs. Will Meyers Sunday. iGet the Habit — Trade ai Hpr-e |
Prisoner Given T ? , o r up' ,' Oct W Kings county. . ' That / W 1 < harg- - —u Drayman Retmer ao,-, MM Ts i.ir... . "MM ing busim . , tir * ,,L ,ui '" ‘- do m
