Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 267, Decatur, Adams County, 11 November 1933 — Page 6
Page Six
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MONMOUTH IS EASY WINNER Defeats Pleasant Mills Friday Night By 32 To 15 Score Piling up a long lead in the first half, the .Monmouth Eagles registered their first victory of the season , Friday night, defeating the Pleas ant Mills five at the Decatur Catholic gym. 32 to 15. Monmouth held a 21-4 margin at the rest period, holding Pleasant Mills without a field goal during the first two quarters. Each team ' scored 11 points in the second half. Hoile, (1. Merica and Hobrock each registered four field goals for the winners, with Hoile adding a pair of free throws and Merica one foul point. Williamson and Sovine led the losers with five points each. Monmouth reserves nosed out a victory in the preliminary, defeating the Pleasant Mills seconds, 10 to 9. Monmouth FG FT TP Hoile, L 4 2 10 G Merica. t 4 1 9 Hobrock. c. 4 0 8 Heckman, g. 0 •• 0 E. Merica. g. 113 Hammond, f. 10 2 Myers, g. Q 0 0 Sheets, c. 0 0 0 Totals 14 4 32 Pleasant Mills FG FT TP Colter, f . . 0 11 Sovine, f. o 5 5 j Williamson, c 2 1 5 Clark, g. 0 0 0 j Edgell, g. 0 0 0 Anspaugh, f. 10 21 Archer, g. 0 11 11 DECATUR SATURDAY, Nov. 11 HIGH SCHOOL GYM Twice Daily 2:30 P. M. 8:00 P. M. Benefit of Hii*h School Athletic Ass'n. of I). H. S. Featuring the World Renowned HODGINI FAMILY of Bareback Riders with “JOE” the Riding Comedian. Night: Children, 15c; Adults. 35c No Tax No Reserved Seats.
iNo weservea seats. ~ _ Get the Habit — Trade at Home ... - - WHAT ARE WE BID? ON THIS FINE QUALITY pi 3 9x12 MASLAND MrJf Argonne RUG THIS RUG has been out on the sidewalk in front of our store for about 10 days. We are having it cleaned and it will he on display in our store Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Nov. 16-17-18th. This Rug will be sold to the highest bidder at public auction by Mr. Roy Johnson in our store. Saturday evening, Nov. 18th at 7:30 P. M. Come in and see the rich colors in this Beautiful Fringed Lavflex Back 9x12 Rug. This Rug has stood the gruelling sidewalk test and will give a lot of service. Don’t fail to be here Saturday evening, Nov. 18th at 7:30 P. M. Let nothing keep you kway. The SCHAFER Store HARDW ARE and HOME FURNISHINGS
, Teeple. g. 0 0 0 ] Gillitlger. g. 10 2 Totals I 7 15 Referee: Engle, Decatur. GENEVA LOSES TO JEFFERSON Warriors Score Decisive Victory Over Geneva Friday, 39 To 20 The .Jefferson Warriors defeated the Geneva Cardinals Friday night at the Berne gymnasium by a de- , cisive 39-20 margin. The first half was fairly close. Jefferson holding a 13-8 lead at the end of the period. Foreman was the outstanding 'scorer of the evening with a total of 14 points, gathered on six field goals and a pair of foul tosses. Baker was the next high with nine points. C. Buckingham was Geneva’s best scorer with three baskets from the field and a brace of charity points for a total of eight points. E. Buckingham was second with; five points, all on free throws. Jefferson seconds won a hard I fought preliminary, downing the j Geneva reserves. 23 to 22 Jefferson FG FT TP Baker, f. 3 3 9! Hunt. f. • • • Springer, f. «, 2 1 51 Moran, c. 2 1 5 Bollenhacher. g. . 3 o 6 t Foreman, g. 6 2 14 | Wiest, g. 0 0 0 Totals .16 7 39 Geneva FG FT TP ' C. Buckingham, f. 3 2 8 Fennig. f. 1 0 2 [ I Farlow, f. 3 11 31 Fenstemaker, c. 0 0 01 Hirschey, g. 0 2 21 E. Buckingham, g. . 0 5 51 Totals 5 10 20 i Referee: Lloyd Bryan. Monmouth. ALLEN COUNTY SHERIFF NAMED IN INDICTMENTS • /CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I is said to have been confisca ed | iby the Allen county sheriff in I January. 1931. a court order in-j | st Dieted Lunz, to destroy "the in-i ■ toxicants, which, it is alleged, he neglected and unlawfully failed i I to do. Wife Divorced Mrs. Lena Lunz. wife of the Allen county sheriff, was granted a divorce by Judge H. M. DeVoss i of the Adams circuit court Friday. | i November 3. Mrs. Lunz was also i awarded $5,000 alimony at hat time. Trial of the divorce suit occu-I pied several days and much evi-j dence of a sensational nature I l was introduced by witnesses for ■ i both the plaintiff and defendant, i o |
BERNE BEARS TAKE OPENER Defeat Hartford Township Friday Night By 24 To 19 Score i| The Berne Bears won their firs'! start of tlie season Friday night. I defeating tlie Hartford township Gorillas a' Hartford. 24 to 19. The gime was close and hard fought ail the way. with Hartford ’ holding a 10-9 lead nt the end of I I the first halt. The Bears fought [ I back in the final two periods to 1 take the lead, ending the game I with n five-point margin. , Steiner. Berne’s half pint guard. I was the scoring leader for the ! Bears with six field goals and al I free throw. Stauffer counted seven I ; points for Berne, while Dro tallied I i four points. Anderson was the whole show | for Hartford on offense w ith five | | field goals and three points from I | the foul line for a total of 13. | I Kistler counted four points and j 11 Merilett two. In 'he preliminary, the Berne I i seconds downed the Hartford reserves. 18 to 9. ' Berne EG FT TP | Dro. f . 1 2 4 j i Neuensihw under. ft) 0 O' Stuckey, f 0 0 0 I Stauffer, c 2 3 7 I Steiner, g 6 1 13 i Fleuckiger, Wr 0 0 0 I Habegger. g 0 ’• " Totals 9 6 24 | j llyrtford FG FT TP | • r, 1 12 4! j Anderson, f 5 3 13 I Merilett. c 10 2 . Meshberger. g 0 0 0 I Whiteman, g 0 •> *> | Totals 7 5 19 Referee: Milliser. Portland. THREE ESCAPE DEATH BY FIRE — /CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) j I waiting arms of a man below. She' I then jumped from the canopy. Mrs. Lillian Hollister, bookkeeper] for the heater, was trapped in her I i office by the flames, but jumped out of a second story window into the arms of several men below. Horace Robertson, a fireman, was knocked unconscious when a steel beam fell on his head. Physicians said he probably would recover. One of the two stores in the I building sold sporting goods. The other was a jewelry store. Shells .exploded from the heat, but no one I was struck. o MEETINGS WITH RUSSIAN ENVOY ARE CONTINUED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) • have taken place. There lias been | a complete absence of the usual j background information on the progress of negotiations. The Roosevelt-Litvinov conferi ence last night was the third the l two men have held. The stocky, florid-faced commissar, accompanI ied by William C. Bullitt, state de- ; partment expert on the Soviet i union, arrived at the White House [at 9 p. m. They went immediately ! to the President’s Jibrary and did not emerge until after midnight. Litvinov, on leaving said that his conference with the President had been pleasant, but that nothing could be announced about it. ‘Will you meet with state department officials today?” he was ■ asked. He hesitated, then remembering that today was Armistice Day. responded smilingly: “There will be an ’Armistice." o ASK REMOVAL OF RECEIVER I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) debtedness to the institution in the sum of $20.0'0. Miller was appointed as liquidating agent for the bank a week ago by comptroller of currency J. F. T. O'Con nor. T.:e resolution, forwarded tp Washington by wire last night, plainly stated that it was the belief among depositors and stockholders that the appointment had political backgrounding. Miller, himself, according to the resolution, is an executive of a Fort Wayne cotrlpany which jowes the ] bank $30,000. The appointment of Miller as receiver followed the opening of a new bank here which made it possible to release approximately $6.1 000,000 of the Old First Bank's restricted funds. PAY HOMAGE TO SOLDIER DEAD I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) members of his party, drove immediately from the Memorial amphitheater to the W'hite House. The Presidnt’s visit to Arlington was only one of many made during the day by high government officials patriotic organization and war mothers. Edward A. Hayes National com-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1933.
"Spook* Warburton, f \ ' The elusive GHOST OF THE Z /' nW .«• TROJANS'ATTACK- !. * 1 / // CAN STANFORD i/! jkki \ STOP HIM ? / / ’ . f Foh IRE PAST Ffcw YEARS U S C has BfcEA) msKiNO A JOy'.W’ I HAbIT OF X JNKI Th,s - i ■ v Thornhill. HIS STAMFORD Fi AM PLAY'S SOUTHED . ~ ,- L CALIFORNIA SATURDAY--- .
i mander of the American Legion, issued a plea to "forget personal prejudices. political affiliations and individual grudges and banish this depression from our land. " JUDGE REJECTS KIRKLAND PLEA i (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) i •••••••••••♦•••••*•♦•••• i .-d to be a party to any action I which would allow Kirkland to go ! free by reason of an erroneous ! judgment. Thiel was given permission to file 'a bill of exceptions and 90 days to ! seek appeal to the state supreme court. i Miss Draves died after a drinking I I party in 1930. It was asserted durj ing the trials that while she was in | a semi-conscious condition she was I criminally attacked by Kirkland. Mother, Daujjnter Burned To Death Eaton Rapids. Mich.. Nov. 11 — ! (UP) —A mother and her four year old daughter burned to death today when a stove exploded in the kitchen of their apartment over the Ea-
A COMPLETE RADIO LOG Onr M’ashington Bureau has ready for you a bulletin listing, by | groups, according to frequency under the latest allocations by the j Federal Radio Commission, and similar government departments in ; Mexico and Canada, all the principal North American radio broadcast- 1 ing stations. About ’.vice as many stations can lie received on your roadio set , if you know just where they should come in on the dial. This bulletin tells you exactly how to determine where stations with various fre- j quencies come in on YOUR dial. 1’ has blank spaces tor you to write ) in your dial settings so that once you have located a station you can , always find it. The bulletin will serve you as a complete radio log , for your own set. I It’ you wish a copy, fill on: the coupon below and mail as directed: ■ CLIP COUPON HERE | Dept. 259. Washington Bureau, Decatur Daily Democrat, 1322 New York Avenue. Washington, D. C. 1 want a copy of tlie bulletin AMERICAN BROADCASTING STATIONS, and enclose herewith five cents in coin (carefully wrapped), or postage s:amps, to cover return postage and handling ! i costs: NAME - - i STREET & No. CITY STATE I I am a reader of the Decatur, (Ind.) Daily Democrat.
Two Great Events in Russian History jjTZ ' "" J . .......■..r.-.-.-.-.-Arzn-.- cot-. ’** XH-’ ’< X* . ~ •* flfr Fr j * * sl ■ * *' s '■ o * I IsMHI 'IK ■ u? “TtLAiL .i- jbk -xB3BI fillOSlW. wa Jfl W/ / * ■ w : £- eS/ \. LenimsX HBpFl Tomb \ - ■X pl Arrival in .Maxim: T- 1 « United states*. Litvinov November 7 has been a red-letter day in Russia since the founding of the Soviet State, marking as it does the anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. This year the date took on a new glamor, for the gigantic anniversary celebration before the tomb of Nickolai Lenin in Moscow’s Red Square coincided with the arrival of Commissar Maxim Litvinov in the United States to discuss U. S. recognition of Russia. Litvinov, Ihe first diplonxatic representative of the Soviet to set foot on American soil, is a pupil of Lenin. At the moment he was arriving at New York, guns were booming in Moscow and thousands of troops of the Red Army formed a solid phalanx in Red Square to honor the memory of lamin. But this year the great event < was overshadowed by momentous possibilities of Litvinov’s discussions with President Roosevelt.
ton Rapids fire station. The mother. Mrs Henry Lambert 44, wife of the care taker »of the ; station, was preparing breakfast ; when she poured kerosene on live j coals in the cook stove. The explosion that followd covered her and her daughter. Rose Marie, with flaming oil. Trapped in the fire-j i swept room, they wer® burned to ■ death before aid reached them. Three other children were saved from possible death by G. Elmer. I McArthur, city commissioner, who ’ i broke down a door to rescue them. I > a Lindberghs Land At Small Seaport Santona, Spain. Nov. 11 —(UP) —| Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh landed at t ils small seaport on a : : headland of the Bay of Biscay late : . today. They had not been reported : since they left Geneva this morning ! for an unannounced destination. o Elmer lAnspaugh of 331 Winchester street, fell from his bicycle on : Mercer avenue at noon .today, dislo-, ■ eating his elbow.
KIRKLAND IS LOSER FRIDAY Kangaroos Are Defeated Bv Rockcreek. Wells County, 26 To 17 The Kirkland Kangaroos lost . : their first buttle to a Wells county five Friday night, losing to the Rockcreek Dodgers by a score of; 26 to 17 up th* Rockcreek floor. I Rockcreek started out strong. 1 holding a seven-point margin at the end of the first half. 15-8. Kirkland strengthened in the final periods but could not overcome the lead piled up by the Dodgers. Gurtner anil Hasler were the, leading scorers for the winners with eight points each. Gurtner scored four field goals and Hasler collected three field goals and a pair of free throws. Willaman led the Kangaroos with three field goals. In the preliminary game, the Kirkland seconds lost a tough one to the Rockcreek reserves, when Rockcreek rallied in the closing minutes to nose out an is 17 victory. • Kirkland FG FT TP V. Augsbiirger. f. 11 3 Willaman. f. 3 0 6 B. Augsbiirger. c. 0 1 Adler, g. Oil Beavers, g. 1 2 41 1 Zimmerman, g. 10 -1 1 Totals 6;>1• , Rockcreek FG FT TP' . Espich. f. 22 61 i Gross, f ll 2 21 I Gurtner. e. 40 81 i McCoy, g. 10 2 Hasler, g. .3 2 81 , ■ .— I Totals 10 6 26 Referee: Von Crowe, Markle. FAIL TO FIND ANY TRACE OF WEALTHY YOUTH FROM PAOE ONE) with neighbors directly across ' the street from his own Wilming- ’ :on home. The discovery was made when police, beginning a second search i of the district, learned from Mrs | A. H. Nerad that she harbored the child overnight. Young Peter first was reported) missing when his father. Dan F. Baldwin, prominent engineer of I San Francisco, and Mrs. Baldwin ■ returned from a motion picture I show last night. COURT MARTIAL CUBAN REBELS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) might again bombard the palace. yf the courtmartials set for to- ‘ day of the 34 surviving air corps i men who participated in the reI volt suppressed Thursday, the . death penalty will be asked for ’ Sergeant Basilio Gonzalez zand Privates Homobono Rodrigues and ' Alejo Sanchez. From 6to 12 years 'imprisonment will he asked for the . others. i Sniping, prevalent in the capital. ' spread to other cities. Here, Seci retary of Public Works Gustavo Moreno Lastres escaped assassinlat ion by snipers who tired at his automobile as he left his office. Three Spaniards and two Poles i were arrested as the attackers. There was no indication that * ———
Grau's repressive policy, backed by an apparently almost unanimously loyal army, would have the desired effect. — . ' O — — i Indianapolis Shop Robbed Os $1,500 Indianapolis. Nov. 11 (U.R) Yeggs broke open a safe on the I Lemcke Service shop here early today and obtained a |I.S(M) pav_roll. They discarded watches, rare coins and rings, valued at |SOO. i The safe, located on a small bali cony overlooking a downtown • street, was wrapped it; an overcoat to deaden the sound while the thieves opened it with punches Louis YSperopomlos, proprietor, said lie had obtained tlie payroll a day in advance liecatise the banks were closed for Armistice I day. Two Reformatory Prisoners Escape Pendleton. Ind.. Nov. 11. (U.PJTwo prisoners at the state reformatory who elmU'd a guard ami made a successful dash for freedom were sought today. The prisoners, Albert Berline, Sullivan county, and Walter Arnold. Orange county, were working outside the walls when they made their escape. Berline was serving a one to 10year term on charges of grand larj ceny and Arnold was sentenced in i 1930. o C.C.C. Workers Praised For Yellowstone Efforts Yellowstone Park. Wyo.—(U.R) — Eight hundred C. (’. C. recruits ac- ■ cotnplislied a splendid record of work in Yellowstone National Park this summer. Supterintendent Roger W. Toll reports.
NOTICE TO ALL MY CUSTOMERS ■ BEGINNING MONDAY. NOV. 13th. I WILL fl LOCATED AT .JOHN BRIGHT’S ■ ■ AUTO ELECTRIC GARAGE I Corner Third and Monroe I < HARRY BARNETT I Phone 441 ‘ ~~ ' —-Js fl Attention Hunters STEVENS, RIVERSIDE BARREL—Special steel blued, bored for nitro p" ACTION—Top snap, rebounding hammer. FRAME—Take down, case hardened. STOCK—Walnut, full pistol grip, hard rubber plate, wide extension forearm. , 410-20-16 and 12 gauge—All Specially I rueo. Double Barrel [ Shot Gun w SMITHSONIAN. STEVENS. Rl\ EKSIDE AND SPRINGFIELD. * BARREL—Nitro steel, bored for trap and '<- ance shooting. One barrel open and 1 choked. Top ribbed and fore. , . ACTION—Case hardened top lever cy lindncai bolt, taped to allow for wear. self-adJ®" making it impossible to work loose. FRAME—Case hardened steel, blue trimming STOCK—Selected oil finish walnut, checker pistol grip, regular corrugated ruhbei er forearm in guages from 20-12. and Specially Priced to suit your pocket dootill jin ofi LOADED SHELLS in all guages. 410-2*--"* guage and priced from 63c«. 95c per box of 25 each. THE SCHAFER STORE HARDWARE AND HOME
uncolml U.R) A 10b ■| varsity, l«Fno l it n(lt '_2l r -*' 1 Im ... " ■converge In the now t2|'' U ■'■ -- InA | UU " an trim 1 ill " "’-'il U """ ■ ' ■ <! 1 ■ ■” w I vXllpn I -- This was in 18S3 ■ "" th* G i. ■ - Mortal Univi 'sity w : .x«|lcl’( >■ ■■ ■ ■ 1 iiraci Xaiiui,;.: school '■■a. \ - 4 - - - - Bgirli f \ w:'.'. he a* j , ed to the indoor hi ■ ;i -i 15 cent tickets, W. Hull’, • K)|j[
