Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 136, Decatur, Adams County, 8 June 1936 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Mutschlers Win Shutout; All Stars Cancel

DEFIANCE NINE IS BLANKED BY MANAGER MIES — Ohio Teams Obtains Only i Four Hits; Today’s Game Is Cancelled With Manager Molly Mies hurling four-hit ball, the Decatur Mutschlers rang up their sixth straight victory Sunday afternoon at Worthman Field, handing Defiance, Ohio, a 3-0 shutout. Molly had perfect control yesterday. not issuing a single base on balls and striking out 12 Defiance [ batsmen. The run sufficient to win the j rams was scored In the second i inning. Putman led oft with a single and was forced at second by Euglelrart. A single by R. Ladd, followed by the only error of the game, enabled Ihiglehart to score. R. laidd opened the fourth inning with a hit and eventually scored on Chandler's fly to center. The final run counted in the eighth. Englehart walked with; two gone, and singles by R. I-add j and D. Detter drove the big first | sacker around to tlfe ~ome plate. R. I .add was the leading sticker : of the game with three safe blows, i 11. Detter hit safely twice. The . Mutschlers again played perfect! hall, two fast double plays featur-1 ing. Game Cancelled Manager Mies received word Sunday evening that today’s sched uled twilight game with the Hawaiian All-Stars had been cancelled The portable lighting system carried by the All Stars, was badly

"Perfectly Air Conditioned" Tonight & Tuesday FRANCHOT TONE LORETTA YOUNG “THE UNGUARDED HOUR” Lewis Stone, Roland Young. ALSO—Color Cartoon and Screen Snapshots. 10c-25c O—O Wed. & Thur*. — George Brent, Madeleine Carroll “The Case Against Mrs. Ames." —o Coming Sunday — The RecordBreaking Hit of the Year! "MR. DEEOS GOES TO TOWN" Gary Cooper, Jean Arthur. msaemaMnsssaß “Cool and Comfortable" Tonight & Tuesday Two Splendid Features! Fredric March, Constance Bennett Frank Morgan, Fay Wray in “AFFAIRS OF CELLINI” and Thrilling gangster mystery! “BRIDGE OF SIGHS” Only 10c-20c Fri. & Sat. —Another Hop-A-Long Cassidy Thriller! "THREE ON A TRAIL.” Bill Boyd. Jimmy Ellison. Also-FLASH GORDON. —o Coming Sunday—Double Feature Show! "PRIDE OF THE MARINES,” Chas. Bickford. Florence Rice, and “Little Red Schoolhouse!' Dickie Moore. I CORT, Cool-Air Conditioned TO-NITE, Tues., Wed., Thurs. SHIRLEY TEMPLE “CAPTAIN JANUARY” Guy Kibbee, Slim Summerville. Added--Cartoon and News. 10c-25c — Coming — Pat O’Brien, Josephine Hutchinson "I MARRIED A DOCTOR" Guy Kibbee • Ross Alexander Louise Fazenda Based on the novel "Main Street” by Sinclair Lewis.

damaged in a wreck last week and the Hawaiian* have cancelled all games in this section, moving in to Philadelphia for u game Tuesday. Sunday’s box score: Decatur AD II H E Bell, 3b 4 0 • • L. DdTler, 2b 4 0 1 0 Klein, cf 4 0 0 0 Putman, rs. 4 0» 1 0 lEnglehart, lb 3 2 0 0 R. Ladd, ss 4 13 0 ID. Detter, If. 4 0 2 0 I Chandler, c. 3 0 0 0 | Mies, p. ... 3 o 1 • Totals .33 3 8 0 Defiance AB RHE Schultz, ss. 4 0 0 1 Smith. 2b. 4 0 10 Deckroch. 3b. 3 0 0 0 Wearly. lb. 3 0 1 • Varner, cf. . 3 0 10 Davis, If. 3 0 0 0 ‘Blue. rs. 3 0 0 0 :R. Brinkman, c. 3 0 0 0 ’B. Brinkman, p. 3 0 10 Totals 29 0 4 1 —— -oSTANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. St. Louis 31 17 .646 New York 28 20 .584 .Chicago 24 21 .533 [ Pittsburgh . 25 22 .532 < Boston .... 24 26 .480 | j Cincinnati ... 22 26 .458 ! Brooklyn . 19 30 .379 I Philadelphia .19 30 .379 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. New York 33 16 .6731 Boston 31 19 .620 Detroit ... . 27 23 .540 i Cleveland . 25 22 .532 I Washington ... 25 25 .500 I Chicago 22 24 .478 I Philadelphia 15 .31 .322 i St. Louis 15 33 .313 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct. Milwaukee 30 20 600 Kansas City 29 20 .592 Minneapolis . ...29 22 .569 : ’’aul ■' _ I Columbus 26 28 .481 Indianapolis 21 26 .447 1 Louisville 23 32 .418 I Toledo 17 33 .340 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS National League Chicago, 13; Boston. 5. St. Louis, 9, Philadelphia. 5. Detroit. 10; Washington. 8. New York. 5; Cleveland, 4 (16 innings). American League Pittsburgh, 6; Philadelphia. 2. Boston. 8; Cincinnati, 3. St. Louis. 6; New York, 3. I Chicago. 4; Brooklyn. 3. American Association St. Paul. 5-5; Columbus, 1-6. Minneapolis. 10-3; Toledo, 3-2. I Louisville, 7-4; Milwaukee, 6-0. Indianapolis. 5-2; Kansas City, 38. o LEADING BATTERS Player Club G AB R H Pct. Sullivan. Indians 31 107 16 43 .402 Terry. Giants 28 75 16 30 .400 S. Martin. Cards 38 125 31 48 .384 Radcliff. W. Sox 32 124 14 46 .371 Medwick, Cards. 48 198 28 72 .364 o HOME RUNS Foxx. Red Sox 13 Trosky. Indians 12 Ott, Giants 11 Gehrig. Yankees ... 10 Dickey, Yankees 9 J. Moore, Phillies 9 Goalin, Tigers 9 Lazzeri. Yankees 9 o TO SELL LOTS /goyiyyFD .from page one) lots will be priced within means of the average person who desires a place to build. The tract adjoins Hanna-Nuttman park on the east. ——o Miss Betty Laudermann and Justine Stace of Hamilton, Ohio, were guests Sunday evening of Dr. and .Mrs. Palmer Eicher. LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY Loans arranged on plain note or on furniture, auto or livestock. Men or women qualify. No one else need sign. Liberal repayment terms Don’t delay Make arrangements for a loan today. REDI'CED COST We make loans up to S3OO, at less than that permitted by the law of our stale governing small loans. See Us Before You Borrow Local Loan Co Over Schafer store Phone 2-3-7 Decatur, Ind.

: CARDINALS ADD TO LEAGUE LEAD 1 Dizzy Dean Beats Giants; ' Selkirk’s Homer Wins in Sixteenth > 1 New York, June 8— (U.RX — Ix*o 1 (Lippy) Durocher, field captain 1 for the St. Louis Cardinals, long has been known as the best field--1 ing shortstop in the National ; league, but today he is also the best hitting one. 1 Heretofore one of the weakest batsmen in either of the major 1 leagues, Durocher has maintained his position on the scrappy Cardinal outfit only through his sensa- , tional fielding. The Yankees had him once but let him go because he couldn't hit. That was when he was known as the all-American "out.” But Hast year ’‘Lippy’’ showed evidence of getting his eye on the ball when he hit .265, the highest average in his career. This year is leading all the shortstops in the league with the stick, batting at a .330 clip. The Cardinals look a 6 to 3 decision from the New York Giants esterday, boosting their margin of leadership to three games, and giving Dizzy Dean his 11th victory of the year against two de--1 feats. Dizzy rested only one day after pitching St. Louis to a victory over the Giants Friday, then went out and won yesterday to j give the Cards an even break on .the four game series. The Chicago Cubs won 4 to 3 1 over the Brooklyn Dodgers to ! sweep the three-game series and , retain third place. Tom Baiter. 1 with the bases full in the ninth. | walked a man to force the win-, ning run home. It was Curt Davis : second victory as a Cub. Bill Swift allowed only seven i hits in pitching the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 6 to 2 decision over I the Philadelphia Phillies. The [ Boston Bees made it three out of l four over the Cincinnati Reds. ! winning the finals. 8 to 3. In the American league the leading Yankees gained a game, by defeating the Cleveland Indians. sto 4 George Selkirk's homer in the 16th inning broke up ' a beautiful pitchers’ duel be- ' tween Charley Ruffing and Oral I Hildebrand. j The Chicago White Sox blasted I out a 13 to 5 victory over the j Boston Red Sox, knocking Wes I Ferrell from the box with a 16 1 hK attack. Third place was taken again by ' the Detroit Tigers, who defeated the Washington Senators, It) to S. behind Al Crowder. Eight-hit hurling by Les Tietje gave the St. lands Browns a 9 to 5 decision over the Philadelphia Athletice. Yostenlay's hero: George Selkirk of the New Yoik Yankees, who clouted a home run in the 16th inning to win a ball game. FIRST MASS IS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Donald Goohey, Dominic Pallone. I Seminarians from the Catholic 1 University, Washington. D. C. were Messrs. Anthony Suelzer and Delbert Welch of Fort Wayne. William Geary of the Dominican House of Studies. Providence. R. I, and Joseh Brake of Potosi. Wisconsin, a student of the Pontifical College. ; Josehinum. Columbus, Ohio, and ' and Joseph Canaan of Detroit were present from Mt. St. Mary seminary 1 Cincinnati. Ohio. 1 The sermon, a beautiful and in--1 epiring one, was delivered by the ' Very Rev. Joseph B. Kendel C. PP. ' S„ Ph. D„ president of St. Joseph’s College, Rensselaer. At noon, dinner was served in the dining room of the school. The guests included the members of the clergy, the Sisters, relatives and ’ out-of-town friends1 In the evening a reception was 1 held at the Durkin home. 437 Mercer Avenue. Following a short vacation, the newly ordained priest will • be appointed by the Most Rev. ■ Btehop John F. Noll, to work in the I diocese of Fort Wayne. This morning at 7 o’clock Rev. ! Durkin was celebrant at a solemn requiem high mass for the Poor Souls. The following ministers took (part: Rev. Simeon Schmitt, Deacon, Rev. Mr. Rosway, sub-deacon; Rev. Hennes, master of ceremonies; Joseph Canaan of Detroit, Thurlfer; Rev, Mr. Shateau and Mr. Benak, Acolytes. Boy Injured, One Finger Amputated It was necessary to amputate the right Index finger of Carl Smith, 6. Sunday afternoon at 2 o’clock after the boy caught his hand in the cog of a pump jack at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Smith of west of Monroe. The boy was recoering today.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JUNE 8,1936.

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PHILADELPHIA TRACK WINNER Wins Title Third Consecutive Year; Decatur Fails To Place South Bend. June 8. — For the third consecutive year West | Catholic high of Philadelphia cap- | tured the national Catholic interscholastic track and field title here Saturday. The Philadelphians scored in 13 > out of 17 events and tallied 5644 ; points to best 19 other outstanding (prep squads. A field of more than 175 young ' ; athletes participated in the finals, ; shattering six meet records and ; equalling two others. DePaul of Chicago gave the champions a mighty battle, but came in second with 41 points. DePaul's ax'es gave brilliant individual performances, but the Philadelphia team gathered enough ! second and third places to take i 4he title. Othere placed as follows: St Ambrose of Davenport. la.. 14; Deluisalle of Chicago. 13; Caihedral Latin of Cleveland. 11; St. Ignatius of Chicago. 11; Mount Carmel of Chicago. 10; St. George of Evanston. 111., 9*4) Aquinas of LaCrosse, Wis., 3; Good Counsel of Newark, N. J.. 3; Joliet (Ill.) Catholic, 3; St. Mary’s of Dunkirk. N. Y„ 3; Loyola of Chicago, 3; Fenwick of Oak Park. 111., 2; Mannion of Aurora. II!.. 2; Cretin of St. Paul, Minn., 1; Leo of Chicago. 1; Elder of Cincinnati. 0., 0; Strita of Chicago. 0. and Decatur (Ind.) Catholic, 0. VICE LORD IS FOUND GUILTY Lucky Luciano, Other Defendants Face Heavy Terms In Prison New York, June B—(U.R) —With ■ the Luciano vice empire smashed > in a clean sweep verdict for the i state, special rackets Prosecutor ; ; Thomas E. Dewey today promised ’an immediate attack on other ! "grabs," reportedly the rackets in , industry. , Dewey snapped the back of the I vice ring, which reached $12,000.000 a year proportions on the $lO . a week it extorted for booking prostitutes. In a jury verdict early yesterday convicting Charles ! (Lucky) Luciano and eight henchmen on all of 62 counts charging ' compulsory prostitution. Luciano, not as lucky today as he was when he survived a gang- ' land ride and earned his nick--1 name, may receive two to 20 r years on each count —a total of 1 124 to 1,240 —when he is sentenced • June 18 by Justice Phillip McCook. The other eight, David Detillo, Thomas Pennochio, Abe Wahr- : man. Ralph Liguori. Benny Spill- . er, Jesse Jacobs, Meyer Berkman, and Jimmy Frederico, are in the same position. Frederico azid Pennochio, fourth offenders, face ilife sentences In any event. Attorneys for all nine plan to appealFour other men. "bookers” who 6 placed girls in the houses, David ’■ Marcus. Pete Balitzer, and Al r Weiner, turned state’s evidence. ? The fourth. Jack Ellenstein. plead- » edi guilty after the state had resti» ed its case. They alao will be s- sentenced, but the first three have asked to be sent to another prison

than the rest of the gang, who glowered as they testified, and Ellenstein probably will go wilh them. The state’s case was built on the cumulative testimony of 66 witnesses, the large majority of them prostitutes, who told of coerced tribute, death threats, tortures in which those who talked too much were burned on the stomach with cigarettes. — o — FIVE CRIMINAL INSANE CAUGHT — I Five Os 16 Escaped Insane Are Recaptured; Others Sought St- Peter, Minn.. June B—(UP) —Five of the 16 criminally insane men who escaped from the state asylum here last night were in cus- ' tody at noon today. Two additional fugitives were . captured at St. James, west of here, I this morning. They were Tom Dalargo. and David Rhoades. They were attempting to hitch hike a ride. Two others had been captured shortly after the break and the fifth : was picked up this morning at New Ulm. Farmers along the river conducted their business guardedly, warned tliat the fgitives may attempt raids on their homes to obtain firearms, knives and other weapons. They were armed only with table legs when they scaled the asylum walls last night after beating five guards Fifty ipa'ice and sheriff’s possemen patroled highways, warning residents. All were armed heavily. ■ Officers from the criminal appreI hension bureau in St. Pau! were ; rushed to the scene shortly after . the break. Gov. Floyd Olson, inform- ! ed of a potential “seige of terror”, i ordered out company D of the 205th J Infantry of the national guard. i Four fugitives were known to be desperate and dangerous. Lawrence Devol, who led the break, was with Arthur Baker and Alvin KarpLs when they raided a Minneapolis I bank in 1932 and killed two officers , and a civilian. Before being transferred here I DeVol -had been in solitary confine- . ment in Stillwater penitentiary. , where he had been sentenced to a life term, prison officials there said > he raved continusously, attacked . guards, and appeared mad. i o A- 1 ’ 11 r Adams Coonty Memorial Hospital ♦ 1 — Mrs. Ralph Row. Monroe, admitt--1 ed last evening. Kathryn Ann Edwards, daughter ’ of Mr. and Mns. Paul Edwards, ad- ' mitted this morning. Donna Grandstaff, daughter of 1 ' Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Grandstaff, ' I No. 6. Homestead, admitted this ’ morning. Mrs. Sam Diehl, Decatur, dismissed this morning. j James Brunson, route 2, Bryant, . dismissed yesterday. s Norxnan Stingley, dismissed yes- \ terday. Ona Lee Zimmerman, Preble, dis- , missed yesterday. j Mrs. Paul Kirchenbauer and 1 daughter Marilyn Rose. 537 South , 13 street, dismissed today. 1 Miss Donna Byer, route 2. Ohio City, dismissed Saturday. B Mrs. Roy Schlickmann and daughe ter Carolyn Ann. High Street, disu missed Saturday.

GOV. McNUTT HITS PROGRAM Indiana Governor Attacks Tax Proposals In G.O.P. Platform Indianapolis, June B.—<UJO—The four point tax program advocated In the platform adopted by the Republican party at its state convention would bankrupt the state. Gov. Paul V. McNutt said in a radio ad dress last night. The Republicans proposed: repeal of the gross income tax and substitution of a net income tax, repeal of the emergency duuse in the $1.50 tax law. reduction of the gasoline tax and elimination of part of the state property levy. "It would mean either the closing of schools or saddling the full cost again upon local communities," said the governor. "It would mean that local government could not function; that bond issues would not sell nor could present bonded debt be retired, nor be refunded. It would cause utter chaos In the finantTffl fabric of the state." Attacking the proposal for a net Income tax, McNutt said, “it would not raise sufficient revenue and a sales tax goes squarely upon the shoulders of the working men and women and those least able to pay. ”1, for one. believe taxes are too high in Indiana." the governor asserted. “They are too high, not because of the Indiana tax plan, which has become s model for the nation, but because the citizens generally are unconcerned with the tax situation until they obtain their tax recipts in the spring or fall. “The fact is, however, that some local communities are not taking full advantage of the replacement taxes (gross income, inheritance, liquor and intangibles taxes) to further lower tax on property. "I urge state officials and others interested in the tax question to urge taxing officials and the citi--1 zens generally to budget their dis- : tributions from the state in their local tax estimates. That is the law and where it is not being done, the law is being violated," the governor concluded. o_ Monroe Bible School Closes Tuesday Nitfht The Daily Vacation Bible school of Monroe will hold the closing program Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock at the Holiness Tabernacle. The program will be held in con-

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“Some Stars for Maxie’s CroJ IMm * i JSwl i. ' I . M **‘ e Schmeli "« t ! Maxie Schmeling, former world heavyweight champion, . i stars to his crown” when his sparring partner, Mickey Mehl » landed one during training at Napanoch, N. J., where SehmeliJ preparing for ius match with Joe Lotus on June 18.

I junction with the revival meetings ‘ i being lonductej there. The .school Fiprqgrani wi'l be intersperced with ! i musical numbers by the Cleveland • colored quartet- ’ Rev. Edison Habegger will deliver a sermon particularly for ’ children and young people. The cen- ’ I ter section of the tabernacle hae I been reserved for the young people. r l Fear Many Dead In Grandstand Collapse Bucharest, Roumania, June 8 —• I (UP) —A grand stand loaded with I 3.000 spectators collapsed today i during a review in honor of the t sixth anniversary of King Carol’s accession to the throne, injuring ! hundreds and causing an undeter- - mined number of deaths. c An offiocial announcement said only three were killed, but reliable - private estimates placed the num-

■ ber at 24 The injured wcreestß t ed at 700. of whom 38n to mH ■ taken to hospita'a. I Forty-live minutes before til ! cident. .'ino ':, -r stanj co:!a|K« without casualties. H ■ Seven Persons Die I In Fire In 111 San Francisco. June S-dJB WPA vocational worker ml j on vagrancy charges and ata 1 pyromaniac was sought byoS today in an investigation <■ hotel fire yesterday io (■ I seven persons were burned 1 1 death and 20 injured. Captain of Inspectors Ch Dullea said alleged di^repa 1 ■ in a story told by Raymond 3 ! es. 27, the WPA worker, I Jived in the Dover apartment 1 i story hotel where the fire oc ■ ' ed. would be checked