Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 299, Decatur, Adams County, 19 December 1935 — Page 8
Page Eight
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TROPHIES ARE RECEIVED BY ST. MARY'S Awards Made By Bishop Noll; Local Team Won First Place Two first place awards and three * individual medals were awarded St. Mary's parish and participants in (’. Y O. activities at a meeting held at the new Majestic theater. Fort Wayne last evening. The trophies were presented by the Most Rev John F. Noil. D.D., bishop of the Fort Wayne diocese. St. Mary's parish track team of this city won 13-ineh trophies for first place in the meet and first place in the four man relay events. Individual medals were award ed to the following: Robert Braden, third in 100-yard dash. Patrick Murphy, third in SSOyard run. Fredrick Baker, third in high jump. Parish teams from all the Fort Wayne churches. Huntington and Decatur participated in the track meet held at he South Side stadium last June. The C. Y. O. of Fort Wayne presented a musical comedy. ‘Patricia." proceeding the distribution of the awards. father Joseph Hennes, ntn director of the Decatur Caholtc high school and Jerome "Tiocky" Mylott accompanied the local team to Fort Wayne. 0 Bedrocm Willed to Daughter Salem Mass. —(VP) —Mrs. Mane’.la Eastman willed a bed: oom to to her daughter and the re.st of the house to her on. The room known as "Becky's room" was 1: queathed to Mrs. Rebec.a V rlis-s A man's wardrobe is not toirp'cte without a Van Huten Shirt, the col’ar will not wrink’t or wilt. Peterson & Everhart Co.
WHAT COULD BE THAN A £ rf~ ' v - . ? ’ SMALL DOWN PAYMENT f NOT ANOTHER CENT TO PAY UNTIL MARCH Ist ' |I ? i JL I IL , U S ''^^^V==== = T T"* ’ C_iS^Y* r_ *l r " Norge Refrigerator s‘ with World Famous J — ~ Rollator Com- jy* I ««•>-•* pressor. Jl WW ® / I «—*■* —J *K I » .A W,T«r4 Norge Gas Range ’ s "' * tSP mB with Revolutionary ’ •.. New Concentrator <jET * -., j j- : '*1 Burner ' ' ical. Owners report that • Many fail to realize how Rollator Refrigeration alone easy it is to have these two saves up to sll a month. CombeautifulNorge appliances for pare that with the monthly Christmas. A small down pay- payments and you’ll see that ment places both in your these Norge appliances will home. And then you ha ;e two quickly pay for themselves, full months before you begin Let tfae Nofge dea)er neaf to make the monthly payments you hdp you to plan the fines( -payments so small that kind ofa Christmas-one that you’ll never miss the money wiH be remeinbered with pleasure through the years to come. And remember, a “Norge W” kitchen’’ is not only beautiful ® M w and convenient. It is econom- I BL Decatur NORGE Sales i Phones 138 or 5261 222 W. Madison St.
* WEEK S SCHEDULE * OF BASKETBALL Thursday I Berne at Yellow Jackets. I ' i ■ iniiilAii.>: > , V*. ■!' ffertwm #t II Rome. i Hartford at Petroleum. Friday Monroe at Kirkland, j Geneva at Hartford. Workers Must Come From Relief Rolls Indiana poke, Ind. Doc. 1!' -(VP) X- ally 7<)i) -ersons to be employed Jan. 2 on two Indiana business [surveys must be taken entirely Ifr.m relief rolls. mid r a ruling of Claren e Manion, state director of the national emergency c uncil. Tile cUKtomary procedure of permitting. employment of 10 per cent of the personnel outside relief rolls will not be > hserv d, Manion said The survey, to cover manufai tur- . ing and ther business a. tivlti sos I the -late during 1935. wll be direct- 1 ed by district supervisors. GIRL OF 1885 RATED LUCKIER THAN MODERNS Alameda, (’al. — U'P) — The girl of 1555 had a lot more fun and a lot bett r hance of happiness than her granddaughter has. believes Mrs. St hie Pavis. ■'”d Mrs. Davis didn't get her theory by reading. She cot it by ’vperience. f r -die v ..girl in 1855. Recently she . lebratod her Inlet birthday. She m a littl? disgusted with the modern girl, w’.io "-wills gin and ••tie'- < on cigaret-s.” “It's not her duty to gallivant ir;> -nd." Mrs. Davis -ays. "A girl's 'uty i-t to make an advantageous ’.arriage and raise children." Automobiles? They're the bunk, t ?h he’ieves. “It's on their account that everyone's in a lethal hurry." Mrs. Davis de lares. "in my day we saw a Utile ountry. but really saw it. T day you try to see a lot .and fail." o T’-aH® m a G <1 Town
‘ Coa.<£l Bob |- - Missus ciawottr* > VKZSIw'M mcmz wo gas mcm ft \>l A 'YlS’t It. x > * X v, wNS ’ ’.*»sA ■. V 'Cm. ' L 1 r t W A T f iwta < MJ w EVERS & NOuf 6.ACk-- A/ , ’ —— FfEkD CQAJM ~ ** ’ f * flexut *£*© AY ■ -U.O AUt> v “ *» 1 C*e£P/r . ■» 1 —
The New Free Throw Rule
| One ot the questions last week iwas. ' What is the new free throw rule?" It reads: "After a successful free throw following a personal foul the ball is to be put into play by the team scored against from any point out ot bounds on the end of the court where the free throw was made. Time is resumed when the ball is thrown into the court. The official is not required to handle the trail on this play." Will the new rule speed up the game? Then* is no doubt but that the gam- will be faster because the time tak-m by the official to recover th** ball and take it back to the center ring will be eliminated under the new rule. It will take much less time to put the ball into play on the end of the court than for the official to take it hack to the center ring. The game will be speeded up further in that many teams with fast men like Johnny Wooden of Purdue, Gunning of Indiana and Whitlinger of Ohio State, will attempt a fast break it the conditions are right. These things together will make the game faster and giv the fans more action. Biq Man Handicapped Will the big man's effectiveness be affected by this rule? It is
BASKETBALL RESULTS By United Prc=s COLLEGES Fai , b ! *m ?0. S>m-liwe«tarn Colle::? (Wins : Id K*.--.t 23. 1 Wabii ; h 3*t x’enrWoutor 22. HIGH SCHOOL Manual (Indianapolis) IS. St. P**u’ 12. •*’’’ ’*•’ ‘ >o c tboa>- *i Hndianap-w )(“> 27 *o’-e*-t*me). v*—j, L*i***non 17. St. Man’s < '*id-*r~c n.) 50, Sum-v-:-*'lle 19. ; r >nh* 2’. F’err Is. Ninevek 36, Portland 29. EX-HUS”AND OF his wife nurnorted’v srtuck -him v-ithhu- slinner he'l dur’ng an argument in front of ths night club. "Two cab driver*? loitering near 'he cene p-tl'e dher ff." Jaxe said "I b c-an to bleed a lot. She turned ■•nd rsn back upstair-?. 1 *.vaa mad • 'ear throng':. I took a cab t Har-
XT) VTX’Vi? GIFT 88. gW F"- T’’O Folks »l .i 0" The Family Sp -1 The Ma” about the pxffi?**,:! house is certainly- USSffiH (■Wlji’T r«"f ,o b e Hisap1 n<'i-’*ed if ho doesn't iWHIfH’W I f~d a box of our ■khHMral Mfei ' *’"w Havana Plend White Stag cigars SS i" h's stocking IK ; .A on Christmas Morn. K ■gm U g>j»i Now Popularly Priced at .... O C In boxes of 10, 25 and 50 cigars - - all ‘dressed up’ in their mCy* Kristrras Kimonas < at anv smoke shop. SNK,' REMEMBER - The Rigger The Box You Buy--The Longer “H> s ” Christmas ; Will Last.
nrr-vnit imdy democrat Thursday, dfcfmbfr 19 ion.’
. reasonable to think that the* big man will be handicapped some. For every center Jump taken out of the game means an attack on > the big mans strength. It has been estimated that there will be t a decrease of 30 to 35% center ■ Jumps under the new rule. This presents a problem for the i coach. Will the coach sacrifice t site for ability? That question will i remain unanswered until the rule has had a thorough trial. Will ■ centers like Fechtman of Indiana, : and Seward of Purdue* find it hard- • er to hold their jobs? > The success of the new free : throw rule might lead to the com- ■ plete elimination of "he center I ’umn The present rule is a compromise on this much debated ■ point. I do not favor the elimination of the center jump because it would mean too much sameness * of play up and down the court. It i would also mean doing away with a phase of the game around which centers many thrills and much tin- ■ ••rtaintv of ph.*/. Test Your Knowledge In the next article look for answers to the following questions: What style of offense can be* used under the three-second rule? What was the rule made for? Will the rule handicap the big man?
*>ir * mergency hospital, had my ! •e'*ead bandaged and went home." "Olga and I wer? in my room." Mat* : i-s eaid. "I was packing my ia- preparatory to visiting our tw- sons who are in a .private 1: el O'ea walk'd behind me as 1 stooned over the bagt?. Then I ”■ * ir .t*‘ened up and she wasn’t in th room. "1 lecided she must have gone '-T*-o. I cot my hat. w c nt to the ele-v.-t >r and rang the bell. The elevator was a long time coming so 1 walked down<?’air-.?. left the h:tel and went to call on a friend " p e ins‘«t’d that Mis? Sleek gave no Indi* ation that she indtended uicide He and his former wife were “on fine terrs," h:- added. o - R’* rrsburg Pa.. — (UP) — A golden eag’e. rare tn this section. i*s 'he nro'-d tr~nhv of John Kingston, a farmer. But it is an exp nsive oss ssi n Kingston shot the bird ■’*t**r it had killed three sheep and •’ oa’f.
. ( ALEB MILNE IS o CtNTINI’V.D FROM I'.Mil-! "NID find the ari’ists' colony nt Wood stock. N. Y., where Milne's aunt, Mi s Anita Smith, had kept con stant vigil since* he disappeari*d from New York (’By Saturday Th<* Milne c Inn began gathering at th*- hospital as soon ns young Milm* was identified. He was si'inl-delirlous, mumbling over and over "Milm* Milne Milm-." Four motorists. Jack Kcaser. Robert Keaser, Max Ripkin. ami Lame* Smith, all of Philadelphia, snw a strange objec t in the roadside ditch n<*ur Hut kingham. They stopped their car and found M'n'". his legee bound and twisted up behind him. his hands tie.-, ms eyes blindfolded, his lips taped s..*.t Ho was taken to a doctors office in Buckingham, then transferred to the Doylestown hospital, 35 miles Trom Philadelphia. There, after a careful examination, a hospital physician announced: "He cannot talk coherently due to exhaustion. We have* found no body injuries hut from the looks ot his c lothing he was thrown from a moving automobile." Robert Keaser was taken by Philadelphia police to th** palatial home of th** grandfather in Ger-
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! inaniown. where he told his story I to th** aged man who from the first had seemed not to take th*' kidnaping too seriously, lie told him that his grandson had been ■j bound with tap*, that hi.s blindfold 1 hud been made of paper, that his 1 clothing sin* lloil strongly of * h«*m- ■ ieals. : i c> OFFICER KEEPS MINUTE ( HECK ON 1,300 FELONS , Lewisburg. Pa.. (VP) Some- ' ' thing li.ee* the "old w 'man who lived , .in a hoe." ( apt. K. J. Lloyd has so , many charg. --• ho always has plenty to do, J Hi.s responsibility is that of knowing at all hours of the day , 1 .here* on the* 1,500-a re reservation , of th federal N rth**aotern Penitentiary each of the 1 :l'*) convicts maybe found .' Lloyd i-esuisc passes allowing inI matix to go to various parts of th** ! huge prison area tor work cr reerea- , tion. He Checku hio pass record four t.tnes a day byroll calls at r.any poinht on the grounds. The aptain's desk resembles the I working place of a train dispatcher. I His work must be Just as accurate. ■ - If he finds an error in hi<s rec ds. i
all activities at the penitentiary halt until the mlaelng .man la aeecmnt**d for. Before coming to Northeaster Penitentiary when It opened In 1932 Lloyd was responsible for the where übonts of th* inmates **( Leavenw rth Penitentiary lor three yearn —■ ■■ i»■ - i*...,. . ii Leng Reach Barred at Tables Tiffin, (>.. (UP)—The "hoarding hottue roach" in barred at Heidelberg COllig" with the adoption of rules for th*- College Commons, a m n'.s dining had. A student must cay - please" when lie ;u<kn far food and "thank you" when he gem it. o 300-Year Old Penny Owned Mondovi, Wis. (U.Rr Three him dred years is a long time to save a penny. Walter Kezar. a farmer livingnear Maxville, has a 1f,37 penny in good state of preservation. It is about the size of the old United States two-cent coin, and the* inscription on one side is English and on the other French. 0 Falling Tree Kills Hiker P* Haire. O. (I’P) — Michael Drydek, 19, thought he'd epend a holiday strolling through the woods, watching timber t n. He was etru k and killed by a falling tree.
’. Pe "ny W* te Not t>F ’ ■| Hu ■'i «:'*»« i-u-Lie,. llt , ' lol#r * ID 1 Vr- 11 After a"/’*?
t«*nnnn nr , n - We N’otCarrja ,:ir K s stock of Entail Toy s [>ut for years and y eah| . have earned a ri , a , J nf , E 'P>-e s Wagons. J cycles and Sleds. See <>ur window dls .u, and get o UI p ri( . esnn ’terns. Never had suj rh ' at such 4 , 've prices. ‘ H. KNAPP&SON st ii j» MiLjGiiji
