Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 163, Decatur, Adams County, 10 July 1934 — Page 6
Page Six
SPoRTSe
CITY SOFTBALL LEAGUE FORMED WITH 8 TEAMS Play Will Start As Soon As Floodlights Are Erected Eight teams have been entered in the city softball league, play in which wiH start as .soon as flood-] lights have been erected. Reflectors and bull* for the night play were ordered 10 days ago. City J light employes have erected the: pole.; Tor the lights and were toetart > work on the wiring today or tomorrow. A tentative schedule has been drawn for the city league and the I church league schedule revised. Three games will be played nightly, on three nights a week. Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. The schedules will be announced as soon as a definite date is set for the starting of play. It * hoped to start play next Monday night. Bleachers accomodating approximately 250 fans were erected this week behind the backstop and along the first and third baselines. With the opening of night play, a concession stand will be operated at the grounds to help defray expenses of the league. The eight teams entering teams in the city league are the Decatur Floral company, General Electric Moose, Knights of Pythias. (A. P. store, Schafer Hardware company, Cloverleaf Creameries, Phi Delta Kappa fraternity. The league was limited to eight teams to enable
(’ailed Report and Published Statement THE MONROE STATE BANK < ln Liquidation) Monroe. Indiana Statement of ASSETS and LIABILITIES as of June 30. and Report of RECEIPTS and DISBURSEMENTS, and ASSET LIQUIDATION for the six months period from Dec. 31, 1933 to July 1. 1934, 1 ASSETS f ASSETS PLEDGED TO SECURE CREDITORS: Loans and Discounts . None , U. S. and H. O. L. C. Bonds t Other Bonds and Securities $ 1.924.i5 Rea! Estate ont> Other Assets None Total Pledged Assets » < ASSETS UNPLEDGED: r Real Estate Mortgage Loans » All Other Loans and Discounts 14.102.41 t Overdrafts . None ( Advances to Trusts and Estates • None IT. S. and H. O. L. C. Bonds 475.00 Other Bonds and Securities None Banking House . 4.122.12 Furniture and Fixtures 4,125.00 a Other Real Estate 5,927.85 1 Cash and Unrestricted Bank Accounts 393.62 c Other Assets -None Total Unnledged Assets $29.06„.6. , , To'al of Bank Assets 30,987.31 i, STOCKHOLDERS LIABILITY UNCOLLECTED 15.247.30 CASH AND OTHER ASSETS FROM STOCK LIABILITY None GRAND TOTAL BANK AND STOCK ASSETS 346,234.67 ‘ LIABILITIES SECURED CLAIMS: Public Funds I 434.03 Total Secured Claims 8 434.03 PREFERRED CLAIMS . N COMMON CLAIMS 8,985.43 C-D Interest Acct .... • *•’ TOTAL LIABILITIES 8.588.89 EXCESS (ASSETS OVER LIABILITIES) $37,645.78 CASH RECEIPTS FROM BANK ASSETS: Real Estate Mortgage Loans None All Other Loans and Discounts . $ 329.23 i Overdrafts None Advances to Estates and Trusts None U. S. and H. O. L. C. Bonds 500.00 Other Bonds and Securities . None Other Real Estate —- None Other Assets: Plate Glass 5.00 INTEREST AND OTHER EARNINGS $ 385.06 , TOTAL BANK ASSET RECEIPTS 1.219.29 R. F. C. AND OTHER LOAN RECEIPTS None FROM STOCK LIABILITY COLLECTIONS None CASH AND UNRESTRICTED BANK ACCOUNTS 1 FROM LAST CALLED REPORT 82.33 GRAND TOTAL CASH AND RECEIPTS 1.301.62 < DISBURSEMENTS SECURED CLAIMS PAID None l PREFERRED CLAIMS PAID $ 188.13 COMMON CLAIMS PAID 128.62 . EXPENSES. TAXES. ETC - 590.29 , TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS 907.04 CASH AND UNRESTRICTED BANK ACCOUNT FROM THIS REPORT 393.62 GRAND TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS AND CASH 1,300.66 1 TOTAL BANK RECEIPTS $ 1,219.29 TOTAL EXPENSES OF COLLECTION 590.29 RATIO OF EXPENSE TO COLLECTIONS (48.4%) ASSET ACCOUNTING Bank Assets, Total from Last Report $31,481.31 Profits from Assets Compromised None OJher Realized Profits None < Additional Assets Acquired .. None Earnings ‘ 385.06 Total Assets and Additions .'. $31,866.37 ' CREDITS AND ASSETS Assets Set Off None Assets Sold Under Section 147 None loss from Assets Compromised None Other Realized Loss None Disbursements, above $ 907.04 Other Credits Claimed . None Assets on Hand, above 30,987.37 Total Credits and Assets $31,894.41 State of Indiana, County of Adams, SS: I. W. S. Smith, Liquidating Agent for the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true and the accounting correct as shown. W. S. SMITH. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 9th day of July, 1934. (Seal) Chas. E. Bahner, Notary Public. My Commission Expires December 31, 1935.
each team to play weekly, due to lateness of season. Rules and regulations governing the city league are as follows: Playere of teams of church league are eligible to play on teams ’ of city league. No player, however, S Is allowed to have his name placed 1 on the eligibility list of more than > one team of city league. Balls and bats for league games . I I WiH be furni.dn-,1 l.y the soft bo 11 . i league. Halls and bats for practice 1 ) must be furnished by individual d teams. The list of players, signed by the « head of the sponsoring organization | 1 should be In the hands of the secre- j 1 I tary of the softball league not later , i than the night of each team’s sec- >' ond scheduled game. The addition >’ of extra players or the trading of 1 I players from one team to another, I after the eligibility list ha* been ‘‘ j handed to the secretary, can be t made only with the consent of the f I officers of the softball league. l> — “ K. Os P. Team Will Practice Wednesday , The Knights of Pythias soft ball & team will practice Wednesday ]' night at 6 o'clock on the south ward diamond. Robert Shraluka. manager, requests that all members of ' the team be present. o f Pleasant Mills Splits Two Games „ I The Pleasant Mills Spartans. split a double header Sunday after-I noon, defeating the Tocsin Mer-1 chants 5 to 3 and losing to the Mil- f ler’s High Lifers. 7 to 4. Vizard J held Tocsin scoreless so reight inn- I lugs butt weakened in the ninth. Get the Habit — Trade at Home
ERRORS BRING 0, B. VICTORY United Brethren Team Defeats Methodists Monday, 8 To 4 League Standing W. L. Pct. United Brethren 3 0 1.000 St. Mary's 2 0 1,0001 I nion Chapel 2 1 Presbyterian • 1 .500 | Zion Reformed .11 -5001 Lutheran 1 - ! Baptist - 0 2 .000. Methodist 0 3 .000, Taking full advantage of Metho-1 dist errors, the United Brethren soft ball team scored its third victory without defeat in the church league Monday evening, 8 to 4. The winners were outhit, 7 to 6, | but tlie Methodists made nine er-1 rors to assist the United Brethren in scoring. in Kile first inning, three errors j enabled the V. B. team to score | twice. Three more counted in the i fourth on three hits and three errors. The final three runs counted ] in the fifth on two hits and three errors. Jake Hill hit a home run for .the winners. The Methodists scored once in the third on two hits, once in the j fourth on a hit and an outfield fly' and two runs in the sixth cn three hits and two errors. Score by innings: Methodist . 001 102 0 4 7 9 United Brethren 200 330 x-8 6 4 .Smith and Murphy; Wynn and J. Hill. The St. Mary’s and Baptist teams will clash this evening at 6:30 o'clock, and the Presbyterian and I Zion Reformed teams will meet j Thursday at the same time. o JUNIOR LEAGUE STARS VICTORS American League Team Slugs Out Win Today, 9 To 7 Polo Grounds. New York, July 10 —(UP) —The seige guns of the American League proved too much for the National Leaguers this afternoon, the American All-Stars winning the annual contest from the stars of the senior league, 9 to The winners blasted out 14 hits overcoming a 4-0 margin that home i rune by Frisch and Medwick hadi set up for the Nationals in the first | three innings off Lefty Gometz. Only Carl Hubbell, ace Giant left hander, held the junior leaguers in eheetk. Hiiebbel. hurling the first three innings, allowed only 1 hit and fanned six men. The Nationals used five hurlers and the Americans three. Score by innings Arneri*. an 000 261 000 —9 14 1 National 103 030 000—7 8 1 Gomez. Ruffing. Harder and Dickey, Cochrane; Hubbell, Warneke, Mungo, J. Dean, Frankhouse and Hartnett, Lopez. Softball Game Wednesday Eve The Decatur Floral company softball team will play the City Confectionery team this evening at the West End diamond. The game is scheduled to .start at 6:15 o’clock. o 1935 License Plates To Be Black And Blue Indianapolis July 10 — (UP) — j Indiana automobile license plates for 1935 will have a robin egg blue "background with black figures, Frank Finney, head of tne state auto department, announced today. Finney said the bla- k and blue combination was chosen because of easy visibility. The plates will be the same size as the 1934 tags. Manufacture of the plates at the state prison at Michigan City will begin Woon, Finney said. Plates manufactured for 1934 totalled 750.000 for pleasure vehicles and 135,000 for trucks. Chicagoans Visit Soviet Moscow. —(U.R) —A group of Chicagoans have visited the Soviet Union. The party included Col. Frank Knox, publisher of the Chi cago Daily News; Ralph Bard, viceI president of the Pure Oil Company, ' and Raleigh Warner, an investment banker. LOST —Case and white gold strap on a woman’s wrist watch, between Miller’s and Joe Brunnegraff's grocery. Return to Bernice Closs and receive .rewar 1. 163-g2t High in Energ.v. Approved by Good Housekeeping
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. JULY 1934 -
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Seven Approved For CUC Camps Word has been received here that the seven boys who applied for ou-tran-e to CCC camps from Adams County. July 7. have been approved. The hoys were signed up at Fort Wayne and then were sent to a conditioning camp at Camp Knox. Kentucky. They are enrolled for a six month's period. The boys from the county are; Walter Garwood. Decatur, route six- Otho Suman. Decatur, route
1 99 MILES OF HOSE PER DAY | THE BITE OF A DEMON TRIPLE X TYDOL IS PUMPED TO CARS — THERE S MORE SIDE THRUST TO CAUSE f THROUGH GASOLINE HOSES TOTALLING WEAR ON LOWER CYLINDER WALL SIDES iT.. MORE THAN 99 MILES IN LENGTH THAN AT THE TOP; YET UPPER PARTS wJ DAILY. IF ALL THE TYDOL PUMP HOSE — Y*~ x - WEAR 5 TIMES AS FAST! WITH A NON- - | " 1 IN DAILY USE WERE ATTACHED YOU COULD ) LUBRICATED GASOLINE DEMON CORROSION |ll W 1 GET GAS IN CHICAGO FROM A PUMP IN / BITES AWAY. LUBRICATED TYDOL OILS UPPER <=» «=> <=> <=» MILWAUKEE. GET YOUR CAR ON THE END r / CYLINDERS, HOLDS THE DEMON IN CHECK. OF A TYDOL HOSE FOR A POWERFUL TANKFUL. “ ’***—-A O. o " —o 0 o I ' 17 0 o° 0 1) K£. f-x ' J DID YOU EVER SEE A GASOLINE BUBBLE |'ff Jfl ORDINARY GASOLINE VAPOR BUBBLES IN YOUR CARBURETOR / B / AND FUEL LINES, STALLING ENGINES IN HOT WEATHER Zi |||4aV V . ■■■ 'i TYDOL IS REFINED TO ELIMINATE THIS UNWANTED ' 1 &a| I ACTIVITY KNOWN AS VAPOR LOCK. TRY A TYDOL TANKFUL //I Mi “IT'S FULL OF PEP, BUT IT WONT TROUBLE YOUR CARBURETOR j Isl CET THE FACTS-& YOU’LL GET TYDOL 'tUH p||vV__— MAKE YOUR OWN CAR THE LABORATORY. GIVE ’ I ill \K/ - TYDOL ANY TEST YOU LIKE. IT'S PERFORMANCE • I 1 1 ™ LL PROVS ,TS CASE WHETHER YOU TEST ITS EX- 1W t 1 ML ™ a .~™ er 1n GETTING you out of a traffic jam rI Ts EXTR A MILEAGE ON A CLEAR HIGHWAY. TRIPLE f "X” TYDOL GIVES ANOTHER SERVICE, TOO~ EXTRA LUBWAR STEEL BECOMES PEACE "DRUM" ration to make valves and pistons work easily, Z GASOLINE MOLECULES NOW BAT*FER AWAY AT | ™ EM FROM HOT EN GINE HEAT. YES, FINE STEEL INTENDED TO TURN BACK ENEMY I EXTRA QUALITIES AT NO EXTRA COST. GET r SHELLS. TYDOL ENGINEERS UTILIZED 200- I THE PA CTS. WE SAY. AND YOU’LL GET TYDOL I TON U.S. NAVY ARMOR PLATE INGOTS IN R * - fe MAKING PEACEFUL, BUT POWERFUL TRIPLE X TYDOL DISTILLING " DRUMS," USED IN REfining the product. I |HR I EE 16 PAGE booklet I W PULED WITH AMAZING TYDOL FACTS ■ I f OET IT AT YOUR TYDOL STAT I ON. TRIPLE XTYDOL™'“ fS Elberson Service Station £5 PHONE 373 DISTRIBUTOR -TYDOL GAS-VEEDOL OIL — DECATUR, IND*
six; William Thornton, Decatur; Harold Ray, Monroe. Stanley Hallopeter, Monroe route 2; Howard Willhoff. Geneva route 2. and Clifford Brown. Monroe route 2. Didn't Know Wife’s Real Name Barcelona. — (U.R) — Mariano Suquet tiled a suit for divorce, claiming that despite the fact that he and his wife had been married eleven years, he never knew her name. He asserted that he did not learn until recently that the name he had known her by when they were married was not her real one.
WHEAT CROP NEAR NORMAL Indiana's Wheat Crop Is Near Normal Despite Drought Indianapolis, July 10.—(U.R)— j spite a severe spring drought, In-[ diana s wheat crop appears to be normal and of tine quality, R. B. I Benner, secretary of the Central I States Grain Corporation said to I day. Reports from various counties show that the yield is from 20 to 35 bushels an acre, he said. •’The growing corn crop also is extraordinary promising." Benner declared. "It has good color. Is well rooted and Is far in -advance of the same period last year. "Tdie oats crop has been hardest hit by the dry weather and can make only one-third to onehalf a crop. "A large percentage of oats has been cut for hay. • The extremely hot sun parched a lot of the young growing clover after the protection was cut. causing some concern for next years pasture and hay crop. The potato crop in the state is short. ' Diversified farming in Indiana enables Hoosier agriculturists to escape total failure In any one crop, Benner said. o— Jay County Farmer Is Killed By Auto Portland, Ind.. July 10 —(UP) James Bisel. SO. farmer near here, was killed instantly last night when struck by an automobile on state highway 27 near his home. Lewis Turckes. Portland, driver of the automobile, said he was blinded by lights of an approaching ear.
Five Bums Killed As Train Jumps I rack Nashville. Tenn.. July 10-<U.R>-lt was feared the death toll of dve would be increased toduy as emergency salvage crews continued to clear away debris of U loaded freight cars which leaped the track of the Nashville (.hattanooga and St. Louis railway yes- - terday. None of the train crew was in-1 jured as the engine and half the cars remained on the track. I of about 40 hoboes seen to boar? the train shortly before it cracked u|) . only half were accounted for. Five wire known dead and sou | others critically injured Approximately io escaped with minor cuts and bruises. Two More Escape At State Prison Michigan City. Ind . July 10.— (UR) -Escape of two more convicts from the Indiana stat.- prison was] announced today by Warden Louis E. Kunkel. The prisoners* Claude Owen. ■ 32, and John Chapman. 33. were! honor men at the prison farm.. They walked away Sunday. Kunkel said. Both were sentenced from Daviess county in 1932 to three to] 10 years on charges of burglary. Lav Cornerstone Os College Building i Muncie. Ind.. July 10 (U.R) I Cornerstone of the New Arts building at Ball State Teachers I college was laid today by George i A. Ball. Muncie manufacturer and ] 'Philanthropist The dedication address was ■ given by L. A. Pittenger, president of Ball State. The building will house the art.; music, English and social science, departments of the college and I will be completed in August 1935, i
Total cost will be *420,b00 ~, which 155,000 was donated by th Ball Brothers. $128,0w by federal public works adminljtra tiqn and $259,000 by the »tate ' Held For Staging Drunken Attacks Wabash. Ind., July u>_ jupj .Asa Parrett, 40. was held today « charges of beating John Brady' and three members of the latter’s fa tnily during a drunken attack Brady was knocked uncoiwciou* and his nose was broken whs,, he attempted to put Parrett out O s his house. Mrs. Brady was badly bruised Mrs. Mildred Shepherd, sister of Mrs. Brady, suffered bruis.o ailJ lost a tooth, and Robert Brady 17 received body .bruises, as each at tempted to aeelst Brady in remo». ing Parrett. Parrett, who was unknown t n t ' le I Brady family, denied the attacks — Q _ D’Artagnan’s Honored Luplac (Gers). France (U.R)The memory of the Fourth \i Ua .: ; keteer has just been feted here ■ with speeches, a banquet and anI cient dances. Thousands from a j|) parts of Gascony and Bearn wii. . nessed the unveiling of a plaque on | d’Artagnan's birthplace, the (ha . teau de Castelmore. D'Artagnan I i was Charles de Baatz. Sieur d'Ar taguan. The young men and maidens of the regiou celebrated their hero in the evening in a contest of i old Gascon dances with matching i music, and the festival as given heere in 1660 in honor of the hero j I was repeated. QBird's Nest Was Fireproofed Fairbury, Neb.—(U.R) Even the ] birds are going in for mod-rn. fireproof home construction. Fred McKean. post office custodian, remor- | ed a pigeon nest from the federal | building as a fire hazard, it pror ed to be of fireproof construction , -woven entirely from strands of | wire.
