Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 246, Decatur, Adams County, 16 October 1934 — Page 5
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■?-«ll ELEVEN SWNORTHSIDE 3W FORT WINE ■« Yellow Jack--J»j’lav Wednesday I nder Lights ')* *>" - North *A , in Fort South Side, IT., w el"'. . tile |F week without ->n v at fej3| LT Bradley 'IW I,G FWhtei C Shipman Kg3K KC Scott [City Water Bills Ire due 1 Bnd must be paid | on or before J let 20 I I I I I AglO''; penalty will be | Bded if bills arc not | Baid by this date. I City Water Dept ■ city hall
Kolter RT Schlatter Schultz <iß Rip Poorman Blythe LH Rog Poorman Freldt ...; R|H Schunnn Butler FB Cronkhlte • Preble Defeats Pleasant Center The Preble Giants defeated the ■Pleasant Center baseball team 7 to 6 in a game played at Preble Sunday. The batteries for Preble were Shady and Koeneman. The batteries for Pleasant Center were Moser, Lipp, and Sprunger. SEVEN BOXING BOUTSJDARDED Decatur A. C.’s Will Stage Fights At Country Club Wednesday Seven star amateur bouts have been carded by the Decatur A. C.'s for their first exhibition of the fall and winter season Wednesday night at the Decatur country club. The flrat bout will go on at 8:30 o’clack and a It w admission price of 35 cents will be fharg.d. ■Headliners cn the card, who will meet in the final bout of the evening. are Dick Hurst, Fort Wayne, Golden Glove bantamweight champion and Lee Durbin, local boy. In the semi-final bout. Cookie Reinier. middleweight Golden Glove clump, is scheduled to battle with Ucyd Conrad, Decatur fighter. Two local boys will meet in the opening bout. Following the opening match in rapid succession will be fights between the following: Frankie Thompson, Paulding. Ohio, vs. Bad Boy Lee; Buss Uhrick vs. Bob Cr sley, Fort Wayne: Tuffy Burkhea 1 vs. Harold B nder, F rt Wayne; Everett Milton. De.atur’s best • lightweight vs. Max Crosley. Fort Wayne. CCC camp ■ hampion at 135 pounds. Nick Little, well known Fort Wayne boxer ami matchmaker,, has arranged the local card. All bouts will be run under strict AAA rules. CAUTION WILL GOVERN FUTURE PRICE RAISING (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ■ah opportunity to earn a likelihood.” He attributed the administration’s active regulatory and cooperative interest in private business to unprecedented economic condi. tions. “Most of us thought for decades that we had a system of private enterprise which would insure to every willing worker the opportunity to earn a livelihood.” he I said. “Most of us still believe that I such a system of private enterI prise can be re-established. | “But it is the obligation of our state and federal governments to see that this is done.” Dismissing an unimporant arguments on the merits or necessities of all actions taken by recovery I IHIIILni WORLDS PAIR--CLOSES FOREVER OCTOBER 31st PROM DECATUR For Round-trip 6-Ddy Coach Excursion (E<kA week-tnri </»’«"(! Octabt’l Go on any train Friday, Saturday and until noon Sunday. Stay until midnight of following Wednesday if you wish. * z Other low fares with lonfie. .eturn limits in effect every dayFAIR ATTRACTIONS REDUCED Coupon good for one admission to Fair and to sir outstanding attractions—S2 value for only $t .00—may be obtained from agent when you buy your railroad ticket. I Ask us about special ucek-endl I bar lain all-expense tours. J Consult Agent for details
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1931.
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units, Richberg said the decisive fact is that the country came through the depths of depression with practically no civil disorder and with the state and federal governments still functioning. After a review of the first stages of the NRA, in which he admitted some mistakes probably were made, the speaker said most of the emergency work is completed and the new set up will concern itself with a review and more permanent adjustments. "These gains must not be lost,” he continued. “But their preservation is in some cases dependent upon the maintenance of code requirements or mechanisms of concerted public action to which many business men are sincerely oppos. ed; and upon which the public looks generally with suspicion and hostility.” o JUDGE TO RULE ON TEST CASE (CONTINUED FROM FACE ONE) yesterday after hearing oral arguments in the case, he would make a decision tomorrow. -Judge Cox ordered attorneys for both sides to have written briefs in the court by noon today. The Republican county committee already has petitioned the county election board to allow the names of Ralph Kane and Will Adams to be placed on the ballots, contending that White and Webb are not eligible to serve in the senate again beca.use they accepted positions on the state board of agri, culture. Suit of the Republican state committee to declare Lieut. Gov. Townsend is holding office illegally because he became director of the commerce division after being elected lieutenant still is pending in Che Marion circuit court.
Tiny Malta Moves for Peace i, a dimE W ,3SiiA * Scene in Valleta, Malta. Tiny Malta, British Mediterranean outpost, which has a history tracing back to ancient times, is making the front pages again, this time in a great stride toward peace. The island's 220,000 inhabitants have been informed that Maltese again will be the official language of the island, replacing Italian add English in all the schools and law courts. Climaxing controversies between the British island officials and the strongly entrenched church with its Italian-favoring Nationalists, the constitution has been suspended three times sitice 1930. England is said to be seeking to win the native Maltese from a pro-liahau point oi view bp making Maltese the efiioiai language.
OBITUARY Neva Mae, daughter of Alfred and Oceano Zerkel, was born April 29, 1908, in Washington township, Adams county, Indiana. She lived with her parents at this place until the year 1925, when , she entered school in Fort Wayne. Having completed her work in this school she gained a position with the Fisher Brothers Co., and resided in Fort Wayne until her | death, September 1, 1934. ■ She was a member of the Fort . Wayrfe M. E. church. On May 29, 1934, she was united in marriage to John L. Groegemeyer. also of Fort Wayne. Her sweet disposition and enjoyable fellowship won for her many friends in whose memory she will I always live. She leaves to mourn their loss, her husband John L. Droegemeyer, her mother and father; two brothers. Kenneth Zerkel of Linn Grove, i and Hubert Zerkel of this city; four sisters, Mrs. Ralph Schnepp. of near Berne. Ind., Mrs. Frank ' Drake of this city, Mrs. Edward , Kelley also of this city and Mrs. t Ray Smith of near Decatut. Two ; brothers have preceded her in , death. ■Earth! in vain our aching eyes Stretch over thy green plain! I Too harsh thy dews, too gross thine air. Her spirit to sustain; i But up in groves of Paradise Full surely we shall see, . Neva fine and beautiful. Midst those about God's knee. o New Carbcn Dioxide Well In El Paso,'Tex.. — (UP) A. new -1 well (producing 648,1'00 feet of cars | bon dioxide gas has been brought in ; [at Mdlntosh, N. M., where a dry ice ; plant is being established to profuce 15 tons of ice per day.
MINNESOTA TO playpanthers Pitt-Minnesota Game Is Outstanding On Saturday Card Chicago, Oct. I«—(U.R>—Big Ten teams have been crashing right and left in early football skirmishes with outsiders, but the western conference will send its crack regiment to the foreign wars this week in high hopes of regaining some lost prestige. Minnesota, rightly rated the most powerful team in the Big Ten, will go to Pittsburgh to meet Pitt’s Golden Panthers in a game which may send the winner on to national championship laurels. Reports from Pittsburgh tell of Pitt’s desire for revenge on the Gophers for last year’s 7-3 defeat, which perhaps knocked the Panthers out of an invitation to play in the Rose Bowl game New Year's day. They tell of how Pitt is pointing for Minnesota, and how the Panthers vision the national title. Well. Pitt is just a year late with its visions. Minnesota had the same visions about a year ago. An open date was left in the Minnesota schedule just before the Pitt game, so that Coach Dernie Bierman could watch Pitt in action against Southern California and have his team at tops for the Panthers. The Gophers have their eyes peeled for the throne left vacant by Michigan and Southern California. Bierman, who is fast gaining the reputation of one of the Big Ten’s best but gloomiest football coaches, came back from the Pitt--17. S. C. game with the report: “Pittsburgh is easily strong enough to whip Minnesota.” Close associates of Bierman say the only time he smiled all last season was after Minnesota held Michigan to a 0-0 tie. That remark may be stretching a point a trifle, but when Bierman says he has a good football team, you can put it in the papers that he has a great football team. He calls his present outfit “a good, hard fighting team." and then hastens to qualify that statement with "but 1 expect to lose some games.” DAN FLANAGAN SPEAKS MONDAY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) quet was served in tile dining room of the hotel and delegations from over the county were present. Jesse Sutton of this city, son of former Judge J. C. Sutton, and county chairman of the club, presided. County, townships and city candidates were introduced. Short talks were made by Miss Dorothy Young, vice-chairman of
Rioting Breaks Out in Yugoslav ‘Powder Magazine’ i . f * it fi f ; I • Here is Jelacic Square in the heart of Yugoslav aftermath of the assassination of King Alexander, city of Zagreb, controlled by the Croatian element, and police were forced to disperse a group of stuwhich is regarded as the “powder magazine’’ of the dents who attempted to make a hostile demonstranew kingdom. Rioting broke out in the city as an tion before the Italian consulate.
the county; Ralph Yager, county republican chairman, and K. W. Johnson, of this city. - -— O 1 -— Wrigley Opposes Trading Off Klein (Chicago, Oct. 16—(UP)— P. K. Wrigley, •< wner of the Chicago Cubs who is back from a visit to Catalina Island, said today he favored the retentio nos outfielder Chuck Klein by the Cubs for another year. ‘The Cubs spent three years trying to get Klein," said Wrigley “and I do n t think we should give up on him in one seas n. However, I am open to arguments, and something I may not know now may influence a change of opinftn.” Klein slumped from .368 in 1933 to .301 last year in his batting. Charge Farmer With Attempt To Defraud South Bend. Ind., Oct. 16— (U.R) —Louis Wykoff, 35, Porter county farmer, was free under SI,OOO bond today under an indictment chargLADIES and MENS SHOES ANY COLOR JU 1 YOU WISH Shoe Dying A Specialty. Hats Cleaned and Blocked. SHEETS BROS.
THE WILD DUCK HAS NO HOME HAVE you ever felt a sudden leaping of the heart when ducks come rushing through the wrack of a northeast storm? ... or a strange yearning at the sound of their babbling high against the Autumn moon? Moving southward ... moving to new feeding grounds ... free in the vast spaces that stretch from the Arctic to the Equatorial Zone! But the wild duck has no home. And your instinctive feeling at the sound of his rushing movement is not a desire to follow him away as it is to bag him ... to bring him to pot, as the keen hunger of autumn days warns you the time has come to prepare for Winter. The wild duck is not so free as man. Hunted from marshland and bay, he is driven from one precarious resting place to another, forever on the move, forever in danger. In Autumn the instinct of man is to dig in. It is primitive instinct, for the chief enemies of man are the forces of nature. He survives only because he is foresighted. He has the ability and the means to look ahead and prepare for storms. Instead of being forced forih to search the world for the things we need, the world brings us its best offerings. Advertisements provide civilization’s most popular and effective means of presenting the world's best products to you at most reasonable cost.
■ ing him with attempting to defraud . the government in connection with agricultural adjustment administration crop reduction benefit pay. ments. The indictment, returned by the I federal grand jury here last week, charges him with violations involving wheat control and corn-hog 1 reduction programs. He is accused of falsifying reports and forging names in apply- 1
We'll admit that we take much quiet pride in our record of service; to us, those thirty-six years which have passed since this firm was founded are among I Take our most P rec ' ous assets. Pride We take pride in the age of our firm because we feel it is , the finest of proof that our service has met every need. FUNERAL HOME -PromptAmbulance SerOice M PHONE DAYGI. NIGHT 303
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ing for contracts. Wykoff was chairman of the Porter county committee in charge of checking up on farmer applications for AAA benefit payments. o Aberdeen, Wash. —(UP) —What was believed the largest salmon ever caught in an Olympic Peninsula stream was taken by Jim Baker in the Queets River. It weighed 77 pounds.
