Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 17, Decatur, Adams County, 20 January 1936 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

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TWELVE TEAMS TO PLAY STATE CATHOLIC MEET Annual Tourney Will Be Held At F'ort Wayne Gymnasium Fort Wayne. Ind., Jan. 20.—(U.R) - An even dozen Indiana Catholic high school quintets will seek the parochial basketball championship in *".e state tournament to be held here Saturday and Sunday. Feb. 29 «•'<! March 1, it WM announced toil: ,y. AT a meeting of the state Catholic high school athletic association held here Saturday, it was decided to make the annual event an < en race, affording all eligible teams opportunity to compete. As an invitational affair last year, eight teams were entered. Eleven teams definitely have decided to enter competition for the state parachoial crown, while one team, St. Joseph's college high of Renssaelaer. has signified intentions of entering. Their decision will be forwarded to officials this week. Thet ournament, held in Fort Wayne for the second successive year, will be run off in five sessions. Four games will be played Saturday morning, and two in each of the afternoon and nigbtd ARF of the remaining four sessions. Saturday afternoon and night and Sunday afternoon and night. Draw for the meet will be Saturday morning. Feb. 22, at 11 o’clock, with officials of the S. C. H. S A. A. in charge. Coaches and principals of competing teams may attend. The tournament will be held in the Fort Wayne Central public school gymnasium. St. Mary s of Huntington. defending champions and again a power in parochial hardwood circles, will be back to defend their title. The Huntington five defeated the host school. Fort Wayne Sentral Catholic. 30 to 26 In a thrilling battle decided In the final minute of play. Both teams later competed in the uat’onal Catholic tournament at Chicago. Entered with Huntington and Fort Wayne outfits are the six other schools which coinnet>’d last year. Memorial of Evansville, St. Marv's of Anderson. Cathedral of Indianapolis. Catholic Central of tiammond. Decatur Catholic and St. Hedwige of South Bend. Newcomers will be St. Mary's of Michigan City. St. Andrew's of Richmond, and St. Paul's of Marion St. Joseph's cjllege high of Renssseher nrohabiv will enter, to make the even dozen. Season tickets for the tournament will cost $1 50 for adults, and $1 for children. Single session tickets will sell for 50 cents. o CITY BOW' IMfi LEAGUE Mutsehler’s Mee’s Lister 145 112 15* Koller 126 140 147 Heimann 123 143 114 j Meyers 146 149 140 Mutschler 97 Meis 143 Dummy 90 Handicap 68 58 58 Totals .735 775 704 , Roop's Restaurant Spangler 147 158 186 Ross * ._.... 180 163 178 Young 164 150 136 Stump v . 182 167 2 n o Frisinger 185 140 196 T0ta15..... 858 778 896 Bt. Mary’s Miller 155 125 171 Ladd 164 177 174 Green 106 1541 Brlede 150 134 183 Gallogly 156 Fr. Hennes 194 172 162 Totals 769 764 844 McCormick-Deering Ahr 166 149 169 Cocanower 136 119 128 Stevens 167 153 179 Baumgartner 153 138 108 Zelt 180 125 155 Handicap 34 34 34 Tootals 802 718 771 General Electric Schultz 194 167 170 D. Gage 164 133 158 D. Gallogly 150 186 193 Brown 167 182 146 Hoagland 147 137 116 Totals 822 806 783 Cloverleaf Creameries Bath 148 104 116 Steele 112 144 166 Laurent ... 144 124 154 Wertzberger 141 134 148 Callow 137 118 113

Handicap •’ ,s Totals..., - ?60 "02 775 Standard Oil Keller 199 ’«- r - lcs , BMM 124 Heare 137 1.1 168 Burke 138 112 1.8 I Bonitas - 198 201 221 'Sauers 136 134 Totals .796 785 866 Ford Motors i Macy 128 186 131 T. Leonard 180 154 1.2 C. Leonard - 122 .Bowman 124 118 10. 'Engle 135 141 135 '’Lytle ............. — 160 157 Handicap - 16 16 16 Totals ...705 805 718 Ten Leading Averages Games Total 1 Spangles - 33 170 Frisinger — 33 169 Schafer — 18 169 Cochran 14 167 Bonitas 35 167 Fr. Hennes — 28 164 Schultz - 29 163 Lankenau 25 163 Brlede — 31 162 Ladd 11 162 Q— Pistol Is Found In Airy«a n e Wreckag Memphis. Tenn., Jan. 29 —(U.R)— A .38 calibre automatic pis’ol with only throe shells in the magazine has been found in the wreckage of the American Airlines passeng -r liner, "The Southerner," at Goodwin, Ark., it was announced today. Announcement of the dircovery gave rise to the belief that the bureau of air commerce might reopen its investigation into the crush of the deluxe craft with the loss of 17 lives. Exhaustive check of the tracedhad failed to disclose any mechanical or atmospheric factor to account for the power dive crash in the Arkansas swatnp. —o — T ide in a Good Town — Decatur

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF ADAMS COUNTY I Notice is hereby given that the TAX DUPLICATI S for State, County, Townships, Schools and Corporations of ADAMS COUNTY for the year 1935 and payable in 1936 areK now in the hands of the County Treasurer who is ready to receive the taxes charged thereon. The following table shows the rate ot taxation on each ~100.0(1 worth of taxable real ■ and personal property, and each POLL in the several units. . . S Due Januarv 1, 1936 — First installment delinquent after first Monday in May. — Second installment delinquent alter first Monday in November. ■ J 1 JEFF LIECHTY , Treasurer Adams County, ■ TOWNSHIPS CORPORATIONS I ADAMS COUNTY — 3—y I TAX RATES TOR « • f <2 £ s £ I « YEAR 1935 *« fi g ’ Il■f S1 I £« £ 5 £! = 11 I Payable In Year 1936 1 g£J3SfilJJi | 1 S| 1 I 11 J : J |IJ 1 State General F”nd I .0’651 .0465 .0465 .0465 .0165 .0165 .o’6<> .0465 .0465 .0465 .046.) ,04b.) .0465 .0465 .0465 .0465 .0465 .046.)1 2 | Common School Fund I .07 I .07 .07 .07 I .07 .07 .07 .07 .07 .07 .07 .07 .07 .07 .07 .07 .07 .07 £ mjcz) “TTWaFMemorial £ooi~£oot ' .004 I .001 | .004 I .004 £.oo’ .004 I ,001 | .004 | .004 I .004 £.004 J .004 J_.004 J_.004jT.004 £.004 J£ ~4'; state Forestry Tax .002 "I ,00‘> I .009 .009 | .009 | .002 ' .009 I .002 | .002 I .002 | .009 | .002 " .002 T. 002 £OO2 £OO2 .002 £.002 __£ S 5 “3TBoard“of Agriculture ”.0035 .0035 ,00351 .0035 .00351 .0035 .0035 .0035 ’ .00351 .00351 .0035 .0035 .093,£ .0035 .003£|_.0035 .0035 .0035 J£ "T£State Teachers Pension 1 (P’ I 024 I .021 | .024 I .094 I .o‘>4 I .021 I .024 I .024 I .024 | .024 I .024 " .091 | .024 | .024 I .024 .024 ’ .024£ £~Total State Rate ) .15 I .15 I .15 I .15 | .15 I .15 | .15 I .15 I .15 | .15 | .15 | .15 II .15 | .15 | .15 | .15 | .15 .15 " 1 General Fund “£’£36so £3650' .3650 I .36501 .3650 .3650 £3*501 3650' .36501 .36501 .36501 .3650'1 .3650 £36501” .3650 £.3650 £.3650 £3650 £ >■ 3 1 Other Co. Bonds & Int. .05 .05 I .05 .05 .05 .05 .05 ' .0.) .0.) .05 .05 I .05 .05 .05 .05 .05 I .05 1 .05 I £ vG 4 Hospital Ma'ntenance .0155 .01551 .0155' .0155 .0155 .015;) 1 .01551 .0155' .o’ss' .0155 .0155 .0155 .o’ss' .0155 .0155 .0155 .0155' .0155'__£ £s~| Old Age Pension £.0’16 I .0*46 .04461 .o'46' .0446' .0’46 1 o’l6 1 .o’l6 I .01461 .o’l6l .04161 .0*46 £0*461 .04461 .04461 .0446 | .0446 £o446££ W O6 ~6 | School Fund Interest ~ 00*9 I .0040 1 0019' .00491 .0’491 .0119 1 00*91 .0019 1 .0049 I .00491 .0’491 .0449 " .00’9 I .00191 .00491 .0049 | .0049 £.OOW l__£ T Total County Rate | 48 I .48 I 4« I .48 1 .48 I 48 I <« I 48 I .48 | .48 | .48 | .48 I 1 .4R I .48 I .48 I .48 I .48 £~4B_£_ " 1 ’’’Township Fund " 'J 9 ' .06 I .17 I .12 I .11 I .06 'O7 I .09 I .16 I .10 I .11 I .02 '£o6 I .09 I .02 | .11 J .06n~.02£j£ —jv 2 Township Poor 1 .09 .06 I .08 I .08 I .08 | .18 I .02 I .08 _| .30 | .11 | .25 | .30 *II .18 | .08 I .30~| .25“£18“| .30 i £ 4 3 Mile Road Bonds .40 .20' .22 I .30 .10 | .25 £.22 I .25 I Jo_ I .30 | .25 I .26 1 25 ; .25“1 .26 “| .25 ~| .25 £ .26 £ 8 School Bonds I I 1 .31 I I .03 I I I | | | || | .07 | .07 I £ £ • S 9 Tuition Tax .57 .25 ' .35 I .37 .51 I .27 05 I .05 I .27 I .25 .48 | .25 b .75 I .48 ~| .48 '4B~I 27 ~ I .25 I £ 'lO I Snecial School Tax I .57 | .28 | .71 I .40 | .52 | .75 I .10 I .35 I .60 | .43 | .52 .20 I! .30“£.60 ~| 60 “| 52 |75 20 “I 10 »--* 13 | Library I I I £ | I _l_ _£ I I £ | .02 II .07 £os~£os“| £ |.o2““|j£ 08 I Total Twp. Sch._& Lib. 11.75 ~| .85 11.87 11-27 1 1.35 11.51 | .46 ! .82 11.43 11.19 1 1.61 1 1 05 II l.Pl~l 1.62~i 1.78 “I 1.61~| 1.51“| 1.05 1J General Tax I I ~~ I £ | I I I I I I | I £7O £4o~£4o~| 11.63 ”£.36 ~£.36 £ £ Total Corp. Rate ' I£ I I I I ! I!' .70 I .40 .40 1.63 .36 “736 Total Pate |2 3811.4812.5011.90 1.9812 14! 1.0911 45 206 1.822 244.68112.942 6512 81’3 872 501 2 041 I Each installment £.19 [ .74 11.25 | .95 | .99 1 1.07 | .545' .725(1.03 | .91 1 1. W £.84 II 1.47 11.325 117405)1935 4 25 _ | 1.02 1 I State " ~ i-oo '■ I i.oo 1.00 £’.oo| i.oo 1.00 £ 1.00 | ~i.oo 1.00 | 1.00 iM | i.oo |— 1.00 p 1.00 ~ M ~£i.oo'“.oo 2 State School | - 50 | 50 __ - 50 | - 50 | - 60 - 60 - 50 | - 50 - 50 | - 50 ~ - so | -son' .5o~(— .50 .50“] —.50 ' —.50 -w ££ _4__Tuition , - 50 _| |____________ I 50 _J I lL_‘ 26 7 I 4 — gJ 5 Special School | | 150 I I _J 1 50 I 111 • 25 ~ ££ £ 6 | Corporation | | | | I | | jj | ’x» 1.00 1 6 J Total Poll Taxl 1.50 1 1.50 2,50 | 1.50 11.50 1.50 1.50 | 1.50 | 2.50 11.50 1.50 I LSO~ 2.00~ 2.50£ 2 50~ LSO~ 1.50“ State of Indiana. Adams Countv. ss: “ I, John W. Tyndall, Auditor of Adams County, hereby certify, that the above is a correct copy of all Tax Levies for the Taxes collectible in the vear 1936 JOHN W. TYNDALL

BEARS DEFEAT C. C. QUINTET Berne Scores Easy 36-8 Victory Over Fort Wayne Five Showing a defense that held , their opponents to a single field goal, the Berne Bears scored an I easy 36 to 8 victory over Central I Catholic of Fort Wayno at the Berne auditorium Saturday night, i The Bears were ahead 9t03 at the first quarter, 17 to 5 at the I half and 23 to 6 at the third '.carter. Derheimer registered C. C.’s only field goal in the first quarter. ! Steiner and Habegger led the winners with nine points each. ■ Dro, regular Berne center, suffer- ; ed an ankle Injury in the second period and was forced from the j game. The Contra! Catholic reserves ; defeated the Berne seconds in the preliminary, 34 to 30. BERXH FG FT TP I Felber, f 2 2 6 i N’euenschwander, f „ 0 11 i Dro. c 2 15 i Steiner, g .....— 3 3 9 ■ Winteregg, g 3 3 9 Parrish, f ..— 2 0 4 Bottler, f - 0 2 2 Habegger, g 0 0 0 Sprunger, g — 0 0 0 ; Totals 12 12 36 C. C. Bail, f 0 11 Gallivan. f — Oil Boyd, c 0 0 0 Derheimer, g 113 Bartle, g 0 3 3 Mudd, f 0 0 0 Diseer, c 0 0 0 Delvln. g - 0 0 0 Scheimell, g 0 0 0 Totals 16 8 o Forecasts Respite From Cold Weather Indianapolis. Jan. 20. — (U.R) — Slowly rising temperatures will bring a respite tomorrow from a cold wave which gripped Indiana over the week-end, according to J. H. Armington, U. S. weather bureau meteorologist. Lowest temperatures in the state tonight will range around 13 degrees above zero, he said. Fair weather will prevail to

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY JANUARY

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night, but unsettled conditions are expected tomorrow. Juniors To Present Class Play Tuesday 4 three act far:e. "You're the Doctor,” will be presented by the Junior class of the Decatur high school at the school auditorium Tuesday evening at 8.15 o’clock. The ast will hold final drtss reh arsal this evening. Admission prices are 15 aud 25 cents. o Warns Investigators Maintain Secrecy Washington, Jan. 20. —(U.R) —Sec- I retary of State Cordell Hull today warned congressional committees that the state department can not : continue to make secret departmental documents available unless investigators observe the confidences imposed upon them.

H. s. BASKETBALL Fort Wayne Central, 39; Bluffton, 22. Newcastle, 29; Noblesville, 23. Dunkikrk. 20; Portland. 12 (Jay Co. tourney). Ashley, 24; Garrett, 15. St. Mary's (Huntington), 24; Silent Hoosiers. 22. New Haven, 29; Huntertown. 25. College Sscores Indiana, 33; Minnesota. 31. Michigan. 51; Chicago, 33. Ohio State, 34; lowa, 26. Northwestern, 40; Illinois, 28. Notre Dame. 37; Pennsylvania. 27, Valparaiso, 37; Huntington, 36. Michigan State, 35; Marquette, 31. Ball State, 40; Manchester, 38. Western State, 43; EvansviHe, 37. Earlham. 41; Butler, 35. o C. J. Mur;hy of Bluffton was a visitor in Decatur last evening.

[MmWL Standing W t- rct io ] .923 Commodores •- . Berne J Hartford 11 \ Monmouth 10 ‘ *' Ve»ow Jackets J Geneva -- ‘ Kirkland - 8 8 ' Monroe J ’ ' Jefferson — 4 » Pleasant Mills 1 1° 0 The Decatur Commodores will open the week's schedule of bas ketball Wednesday night, meeting St. John's of Delphos on the local court. —-000 — The Commodores have won 12 games and have lost only one tilt this season, while the De'phos five has won 11 of 12 contests, losing only to Catholic Central of Lima, with two regulars out of the lineup because of injuries. —oOo — The two teams have been great rivals for years and the outstanding records of the quintets should make for another capacity house Wednesday night. Delphos' victims have been Ottawa. Wren. Ottoville, Celina I. C.. St. Mary's of Huntington. Ind.. Alger, St. Wendelin's and Delphos public high. —oOo Last season the Commodores defeated Delphos twice, both in hard fought battles and Wednesday's game should be a replica of previous meetings of the teams. —oOo — The Commodores will also play at home Friday night, meeting the Jefferson Center warriors. This likely will be just a breather for . the Commies, yet stranger things have happened than an upset by the Warriors. —oOo—The Yellow Jackets will be on the road Friday night for

their only flame of the week. The Jackets will battle isle Columbia City Eagles at Columbia City in another northeaatern Indiana conference till. —oOo — Tho Eagles will bo plenty tough, as attested by their 36 to 25 Victory over South Side of Fort Wayne Friday night. Columbia City also I®’® **“* l lty All-dales a real battle a few weeks ago before being nosed out by two I points. —oOo — Central Tigers of Fort Wayne, to ail those who previously had j doubted their power, showed in wtog antes last week that they are the outstanding quintet in this section of the state at the present ' time. -000— Victories over Decatur and Bluffton last Friday and Sat--1 urday should convince the most skeptical of Central's power. To us, the chief sac--1 tor In Central's power is a wealth of reserve strength. Coach Mendenhall has 10 or 12 men of about equal ability and this superior reserve strength was particularly noticeable here last Friday, when the Jackets weakened in the closing minutes of the game after putting up a great fight. Scores of one year ago: Yellow Jackets, Columbia City. Yellow Jackets. 31; Central, 26. Berne, 40; Commodores, 31. South Side. 25; Berne, 20. Kirkland. 44; Monmouth, 14. Geneva, 20; Hartford, 19. i Jefferson. 40; Jackson, 37. Lancaster, 33: Monroe. 11. —oOo — The Kirkland-Lancaster game, scheduled for Friday night at Lancaster, has been changed to . Wednesday night at the request of I Lancaster officials. i o Young Democrat To Keep “Hands Off” Indianapolis, Jan. 20 — (U.R) — i Participation of the young Demo- ' erata of Indiana in state campaign--1 ing will be restricted to full support of the party’s ticket in the organization m eting yesterday. The organization adopted a "hands-off” policy concerning primary elections and pre-convention

ftctivbtlc-. Th,, y xW also submitted direction <,( the n „ nw f . '«■ eetnmltteo. ril|| i GENEVA BEA J MONROE ][| W in Saturday ■ The Geneva C(lr | llalg ia ■ behind Saturday h j gll , (|| n ■ a 25-24 victory OV( , r lhf Bearkatz at the Klrkl Monroe led at th., half, could not sotp c,v U „ va ‘ , ■ rally. ■ E. Stucky. Monroe fomarfß the scoring leader with tbruH goals and four free thrown ■ ingham was high for Ge Mvi W fould fielders. V In the preliminary, the J seconds def.'iv d tne serves, 25 to 16. ■ Geneva FG Augsburger. f. 2 Q Grile, f. 0 . Muth, f. ! , Shepherd, c. I j Beerbower, g 2 1 Windmiller, g 0 } Buckingham, g ...... 4 j Totals 10 5 Monroe sq pj ’E. Stucky, f. . 3 ( Ray. f 0 0 Ixingenberger, f. 1 8 Gilbert, c. . 3 5 Huser. g 3 8 VonGunten. g. 0 j Wolfe, g 0 j Totals 10 4 > Referee: Markley ißockcra

r EX PERI RADIO SERVICE On All Make Sets I CALL 244 > I Decatur Electric 1 Shop 1 ■ ■ ■N.I. j