Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 306, Decatur, Adams County, 29 December 1933 — Page 6

Page Six

Yellow Jackets Trounce Eliot Prep Team, 26 to iq

NEWARK TEAM ISDEFEATEO BY LOCAL FIVE New Jersey Team Is Handed First Defeat hy Indiana Quintet Calling a halt to the winning streak of the Eliot prep team from Newark, Now Jersey, the Decatur Yellow Jackets han<le<l the easterners a decisive 26 to 16 defeat on (be local floor Thursday night. The Newark lads came to Decatur with a record of three victories . hi four starts on their western tour,, all three of these victories coming at the expense of Indiana teams. ; They had defeated Washington, Gibault of Vincennes ami Anderson and had lost only to Springfield. Ohio. After a ilose first half, which ended witli Decatur on the iong end of a 9-7 count, the Yellow Jackets piled up a lead in the second halt . and won with ease. Coach Heth Curtis used sulwtitute.s during the i losing minutes of the game. tieraid Strickler’s free throw and a field goal by Blythe gave Decatur . a 3-0 lead at the first quarter. Newark took a 5-3 lead shortly after the sc on! period opened but the V el- I low Jackets came back to hoM the 9-7 margin at the half. ■ The invaders failed to score a 1 - point during the third quarter, Decatur totaling six in the same per- I : iod to lead by eight points. New- ■ nr ttiis lead to oix points at i

ADAMS THEATRE SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY 10-25 c Sunday and Monday Matinee, 2 P. M. First Sunday Eve. Show at 6:GO First Monday Eve. Show at 6.30 “The Prizefighter and The Lady” with Myrna Loy • Max Baer - Primo Camera-Jack Dempsey-Walter Huston-Otto Kruger Vince Barnett Meet Max Baer! The New “It” Man O£ The Screen! Such a fi'm treat comes once in a blue moon! Exciting from start to finish! Because its got a love story that you I love' Because its got the first ring batt'e between Primo Camera and Max Baer! And what a battle! Because its so romantic! It Is The Suprise Film Hit of the Year! ADDED—“Little Broadcast" and Cartoon. Tonight and Saturday Ed Wynn (The Perfect Fool) in “THE CHIEF” with Dorothy Mackail l and “Chic” Sale. The Giggle King In A Howling Comedy. Added—“ Fighting with Kit Carson" 1 A 1 and Cartoon AV“At7V CORT THEATRE SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY Sunday Matinee 2 P. M. First Sunday Evening Show, 6:30 Matinee New Year's Day, 2 P. M. ‘College Coach’ The low-down on the touchdown merchants! Slashing. stinging facts about college footba 1 ! and the ! master minded Coach who built a push over team into a miPion dollar football team. Cast Includes: Dick Powell, Ann Dvorak, Pat O’Brien, Lyle Talbot ADDED—Mickey Mouse, Fox News and ! Andy Clyde Comedy. 10c • 25c - TONIGHT - - SATURDAY - “TAKA Tim McCoy, Shirley Grey ■ CHANCE NITE” “Hold The Press” A Big Program for Only Also Comedy. 10c 10-15 C Don’t Miss It!

■ 17 11 but the Yellow Jackets con ■ tinned to drive in for points to pile up an insurmountable lead. Blythe was the loading st-oret with four field goals and as many i free throws for 12 points. I’utll I Strickler was next in line with nim points. Decatur made only 12 out ol 23 free throws to hold down their final margin. Goldfein led Lie eastern quintet with two field goals and two foul I tp.-ees for six points. Goldfaddeit I score! five points for Eliot. The vis itors committed many fouls, losing ' three men on personals and playing the last minute of the game with only three men. Decatr.r FG. FT. TP I’. Strh kier, f 3 .“> 9 Cowan, f 0 2 2 Whinger. c . 0 2 Blythe, g 4 4 12 G. Strickler, g o 2 2 Wynn, f 0 ’• 11 Saunders, f 0 11 11 Eady, v ” 0 " Peterson, g 0 0 0 Butler, g t> " " Totals 7 12 26 Eliot FG. FT. TP. Goldfein, f 2 2 6 Goldfad leu. f 2 1 O'Neill. c " " " Bakum, g 11 1 Bain, g Oil Scliere. g 113 Totals '• •’> *• Referee Tudor. Fort Wayne; umpire Geller. Fort Wayne. — o Would Limit Liquor Sales Pullman. Wash - - (U.R> A resolution that no liquor be dispensed anywhere within one mile of any of the state s Institutions of higher education has been drawn up by a Pullman citizens’ committee. o —————— Get the Habit — Trade at Home

HIGH SCHOOL GAMES CARDEO Tourneys Feature High School Schedule Over Holidays In State ‘lndianapolis. Ind.. Dee. 29 (I I’l I An intense but brief high school 1 basketball schedule will bo played in Indi ma this week-end, beginning this afternoon witli the fourth an--1 nttal Gary holiday tournament. A North Central conference game will be played tonight. Richmond meeting Newcastle. Logansport at Huntington. Connersville at Washington and Shelbyville at Columbus are among non-eonferenee rivals scheduled to clash. Eight teams will participate in , the Gary tourney. They are Froebel. Horace Mann and Lew Wallace, all .of Gary; Emerson of Fast Chicago, Hammond, Hobart and Whiting Tlie winner will he decided tomor- , row. All but two of the teams entered in the Gary event have won more than half of their encounters this season. Hammond, with five victories. has been defeated only by Froebel ami is lea ling the western livision of the Northern Indiana conference. Kokomo will play at Marion tonight. The game will be a warm-up for the annual big four blind tournament at Muncie next Monday. New rustle and Muncie are the other quintets which will praticipate in the tourney. A tournament also will be held at Evansville Monday afternoon and night when four teams meet al Central high school in the second annual Evansville invitational event. Bosse ant Vincennes and Central and Washington are paired in the opening games. ...... — o— — by The Decatur Yellow Jackets upheld the reputation of Indiana high school basketball teams where three others had failed, halting the victory string of the Elliot prepar-. atory school team from Newark,. New Jersey, last night on the local floor. —o()o — The easterners came to Decatur with the scalps of three Indiana high school teams dangling from their belts. The visitors had defeated the Washington Hatchets. Gibault of VinVennes and the famous (formerly infamous) Anderson Indians. —oOo— The Yellow Jackets gave the invaders a lesson in basketball. handing the Newark boys a decisive 26-16 defeat. The 1

U. S. Control May Result From Stock Quiz MPPT 1 —- CTj I 1 * UB '*' ■ k. fn ■'& jMk ■ jk WfrA B « Ji . Wxjßl ZV Albert HViggin 888 l '"gyr-- ~ M i .CBBB v il Bg w jgjil BL & jjli ' l ZbR BBL B F£RPtH<ixpftcor«A ; Wx- j 1m . .. BBBBBk. <J F. MorgajsT CharvesMttchew; Justice Br/undeis ® Labors of the Senate Banking and Currency Committee, which spent the last year investigating Wall St. stock and banking practices may bear fruit during the coming session of Congress, according w> Senator Duncan Fletcher, the committee’s chairman, who revealed that recommendations will be made seeking Federal regulation of the Stock Exchange. Thanks to the disclosures which came to light under the masterly scalpel of Ferdinand Pecora, counsel for the committee, who quizzed such big money men as J. P. Morgan, head of the great financial house. Charles E. Mitchell, former head of the National City Bank, and Alfred Wiggin, former head of the Chase National Bank, legislation will also be proposed to stop loopholes in the income tax laws. Advocates of Federal stock control cite ruling of U. S Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis that Congress may deny use of mails to any business conducted under conditions deemed injurious to public

DEC \TUP. DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1933.

’ margin of victory should have been much larger, as Decatur missed many good under the basket shots. | 000- | In Justice to the Elliot team, we must admit that they appeared tired by their strenuous program. . Carrying only six men. the boys showed the strain of constant travel ami plenty >f basketball. o<)That tired feeling was plainly i evident in the personal fouls colI umn. Unable to keep up with the I Yellow Jackets wh.-ti the local buskeleers broke for the basket, 'all the visitors could do was foul to stop Decatur. As a result, three ■ of the Newark team were ousted on fouls, and the visitors played the last minute with only three men. Coach Curtin, using all suit- ; st it tiles in the tinal minutes, also pulled one of his five men. finisliing the game with only four players. —o DoNewark has one more gam * scheduled before starting the homeward trek The eastern quintet will play dt Wakarusa tonight. Elliot now lias a record of three games w‘on and two lost. Last yea' the invaders won only one game on the entire trip. o()o The Commodores journey to Anderson tonight to .meet St. Mary's high school. It is the last game of the year 1933 for the locals, their next appearance being January 6 in the invitational tourney at the local gym. —oOo — The Yellow Jackets meet the South Side Archers at Fort Wayne Saturday night. It is the second conference game of the season for the locals, who dropped their opener to North Side by one point two weeks ago. Botli first and second teams will play, the first game starting at 7 o'clock. oOo — HAPPY NEW YEAR HIGH SCHOOL SCORES Linton. 13; Michigan City. 11. Muncie. 31; Bedford. 25. Sullivan. 9; Central (South Bend), IS. Brazil, 34; Wiley (Terre Haute), 14. ti* College Scores Baltimore. 38; Georgia Tech, 19. Indiana. 36: Marshall. 20. De Paul, 22: Minnesota. 14. Washington V . 32; Illinois Nori mal. 28. California. 48; Santa Clara. 26. 1 Wilmington. 25; Cincinnati, 22. o— — — Quit Five Jobs for One Chowchilla, Cal — (U.R) —H. V. Eastman had a Job today, but ho had to resign five others to take it. He relinquished his positions as niayoY of Chowchilla, treasurer of the California Cotton Cooperative Association, member of the statewide water plan steering committee. director of the Madera County Farm Bureau Federation, and president of the Chowchilla Farm Center, when he became an appraiser for the Federal Land Bank. o Dance New Year’s Eve. 1 Sunday night. Sun Set.

ELEVENS READ! FOR BIC BATTLE Stanford And Columbia End Heavy Workouts For Game Monday Pasadena, Calif.. De". 29 (UP) — Stanford and Columbia today nearnd the end of their training routes that will converge in Ilose Bowl here New Year’s Day for the annual Intersections! tournament of roses football game. | Heavy workouts were over. Light drills were the order of the day. ‘ Rival coaches Tiny Thornhill and Lou Little began polishing off of | tensive and defensive bearings. To- i morrow the training grind will be; .ompleted and Columbia's 30 play-1 era will be bundle! aboard a train I at Tmson. Ariz.. and brought here for a one-day rest. The situation today found the Stanford team an overwhelming favorite over New York City’s ticat Rose Bowl representative. Odds held at 2*4 to 1 or 12 points at even , money. Betting commissioners said i there was little response among the betting fraternity even at these i odds. Their report reflected what was generally believed- —A lack of popular interest in the forthcoming battle. -Although officials displayed a reluctance to discuss the matter, it ; was believed in most quarters that; the two teams will battle before the, smallest rose tournament crowd in years. An attendance of 50,000 was , regarded as a maximum estimate. Stanford cohorts received a scare last night when Bobby Grayson, spectacular sophomore half back, was ordered to bed with a bad cold. Reports circulated about there was strong likelihood lie would not be in uniform next Monday. But the reports were scouted, barring complications. As Grayson went on the sick list Monk Moscrip. .star end. and Wes Muller, center, returned to service. Both had been out with colds. They were scheduled to take part in today’s exercises . Conversely, the Columbia squad was reported in tip-top condition, physically and mentally. oMAY DISMISS JAMES ADAMS (CONTINUED FROM governor* Adams’ pres-' ent one-year term ends within al few months. While political observers said; Mrs. Williams’ dismissal was a| result of her alliance with the| former state chairman. Pleas, Greenlee, patronage secretary to, the governor said the discharge, was in accordance with the state administration's pledged program. of economy. ‘‘Other employes will absorb the - work done by Mrs. Williams and | no successor will be appointed. ; Greenlee said. Mrs. Williams first was appointed to the license bureau by Frank Mayr. Jr., secretary of state, but i she supported Peters ami McNutt ,

when the former attempted ’<> block the nomination of the governor. Finney was dismissed as n probable successor to Adams in the highway department. ROOSEVELT IN TALK AGAINST INTERVENTION (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ernmen’ in this hemisphere is the concern of each individual nation withi.t its own holders first of all. "It is only if und when the failure of orderly processes affects the other nations of the continent i tliut it becomes their concern; and the point to sires* is that in such at event It becomes the joint concern of a whole continent in which we are all neighbors." GOLD HOLDERS GIVEN ORDERS (CONTINUED FROM FaGE_ would equal the figure at which the banks now value it. The idea Is for only the government to profit from revaluation. A total of »5J8,531,814 in gold money of which $311,**44,985 is in coin, still is in the hands of the public or lost despite Presidem Roosevelt's executive order, issued soon after he assumed office, directing that gold holdings of more than SIOO be exchanged for other legal tender. The legality of the president's | order was challenged, it was contended that the secretary of the treasury instead of the President should, have Issued the order. Acting Secretary Morgenthau issued the new order. Penalties for failure to surrender the gold were changed. Whereas the president's order provided for tines up to SIO,OOO and imprison nient up to 10 years, the new order provided only for fines. These are to be uniformly equal to twice the value of the gold which is withheld. Thus a fine under the new order might be much heavier than heretofore. Heretofore, holders of gold or gold money have been granted an exemption of SIOO in their gold holdings. The only exemptions under the new treasury order were gold held under license; rare coins, not including $2.50 gold pieces; unmelted scrap of not more than SIOO or

9 (UP)

CANDY i Send a Greeting to everyone Hard Mixed, ibioc B Card today. Our Sincere Wish Old F'Shioied’Hore-’ R for a hound, lbl9c B “Twould be a shame to O’d Fashioned Choco- ffl HAI Pl late Drops, lb. .... l”»c B forget" Somebody’s Birth- WT „__ T - r> , . „ Chocolate Chips, lb. 25c ■ , . , . . ... NEW \ EAR Hershey Chocolate K day—Somebody who is ill. Kisses lb2sc ■ Week-End Savings MINERAL OIL AQ_ THROAT AND NASAL ATOMIZER- B Lamson's—*/j gallon vOU for alcoholic, aquem and QWp B oily solutions g WRIGHT SMOKE with Meat Salt and . 4 . .. , h B Sugar Cure. QA n Mi 31 SOLUTION - Antiseptic Mouth g 10 pounds O</C Wash—Kills Germs ImC B full pint■ TOILET PAPER—4 Rolls L . zxnH 1000 sheets to roll—4 for COD LIVER Oil. —Rich in MS£ B vitamins—fuh quart 47 Ig NIPPLES — Stork — Non-collapsible S type, made with repeated *| MILK OF MAGNESIA g sterilization—Special—3 for .. AVC full pint E ALMOND HAND LOTION *| Q ASPIRIN TABLETS—IOO’s y9C R Mascals—l6 ounce ~r</C B . 49C CASTORIA-2 oune« 25C | TAYLOR THERMOMETER OP B SYRUP OF FIGS—6 ounces ■ NASAL SPRAY with PCf|z» .. B MELO-MALT with Cod Liver ■ VAPURE — Wondreful inhalant for E icl } 4 i n quickly relieving the discomfort of h of Ch,ldren a " d B Head Colds and Nasal Catarrh. us '••••■ HOT WATER BOTTLE £Qz» R 2 Qt. size—l year guarantee... O«/C — B B. J. SMITH DRUG CO. I The REX ALL Store

i in the process of fabrication for - industrial, professional or ornamental use; tliat now held hy the Reconstruction Finance t’orpor- - ation or n federal reserve bank, and gold held In various United States possessions owned by persons not domi<-iled or doing bus iness in the continental United States. Holders were directed to deposit their gold with any federal reservo bank for tlie account of Hie Fed- . eral government and send conflr | , mulion of the deposit to the treasurer of the United States ut Wash-1 ’ ington. The depositor later will i be reimbursed with non-gold currency of’the United States, such as silver dollars, or other legal tendi trf EASTERN COAST SUFFERS FROM WINTER BLASTS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE "NE) I trict with 24 below. Duluth, i Minn., recorded 22 lielow and : I Minneapolis 12 below. These

Auction Sale • at - NU-VVAY FURNITURE EXCHANGE 164 South Second Street Decatur, Indiana SATURDAY, JANUARY 6,1934 commencing at 7:30 o’clock P. M. All kinds of Used Furniture—consisting of Pianos, Dinin) Room Suites. Kitchen Cabinets, Living Room Suites, Bd Room Suites, Dishes. Dressers, Beds. Rocking Chairi Radios. Rugs, Lamps, Smoking Sets, Mirrors, Kitchd Tables, Chairs. Oil Stoves. Heating Stoves. Cook Stovej and many other articles. NU-WAY FURNITURE EXCHANGE 1 Roy S. Johnson, auctioneer. HIM MMH

murks considerably than those rrf the past j J Amid a new fall O s light 1 Lake Michigan again was J scene of thrilling battles | IPt ,J men and the winter Two airmail pilots were r(! ZJ by coast guardsmen near pJj aba after drifting f or h 0 >3 forced down on the lakt- ] Other guardsmen rescued J crew of the fiahliitg schooner J gull, after a 24-hout light t u \j the tiny craft afloat in the j filb-d lake. Death toll of the st-,mw «h|J have ravaged the nation ('hristmas day today was mod Ing past the 150 mark. MAIL PILOTS ARE RESCUE i frqm pa ° b oMd I, water, but the wing waj jd ‘dry except for the spray." The ship rode well on the ffi J .erate ground swell, but said he suffered from s.-a-gJ I ness. Both men showed signs ] nervous strain. — I—ii i