Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 138, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1936 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

ST. MARY'S AND U.B. WINNERS WinTuesdayNight Games In Church Softball League United Brethren and St. Mark's church softbull teams were victorious in Tuesday night's game in the Decatur church softball league, with the Lutheran-Baptist and Union Chapel teams the victims. United Brthren handed the Luth-eran-Baptist team an 11-1 defeat in the opening game. The winners obtained 13 hits, while holding their opponents to only live safe

"Perfectly Air Conditioned" Tonight & Thursday Doors Open 6:30. Come Early! WOULD YOU PUT A ROPE AROUND HER PRETTY NECK? If you were a member of this jury, what would YOUR verdict be? | LOVING MOTHER? | I COLD-BLOODED I MURDERESS!! I ...which is she? I lAdoioh Zukar CARROLI BRENT I USE AGAINST Mrs. AMES | A Paramount Pi'tura with Arthur Treacher * Alan Baiter Beulah Bondi * Alan Mowbray IB ALSO — "Old Mill Pond" Color Cartoon and Music Novelty. 10-20 c Special Notice The same picture and sama Entire Program will be shown TONIGHT ONLY at the Madison Theater Doors Open 6:3o—Come Early! Friday & Sat. — Fearless JIMMIE ALLEN . . radio idol . . popular birdman . . in a thrilling airplane story “SKY PARADE" Katherine DeMille, Wm. Gargan. —o Sun. Mon. Tues.— Bang! Go the box-office records as "MR. DEEDS GOES TO TOWN." A "pixilated" comedy romance with Gary Cooper, Jean Arthur, Lionel Standee. A Frank Capra Hit Production! ' i | CORT Cool-Air Conditioned Tonight & Thursday SHIRLEY TEMPLE “CAPTAIN JANUARY” Guy Kibbee Slim Summerville. Added-Cartoon and News. 10c -25 c Saturday Tim McCoy - Billie Seward “THE MAN FROM GUNTOWN" Piu»—Comedy. Cartoon, Chap. 11 “Rex and Rlnty.” —o Coming Sunday Pat O’Brien-Josephine Hutchinson “I MARRIED A DOCTOR” Louise Faianda-Ross Alexander Guy Kibbee Based on the novel “Main Street” by Sinclair Lewis.

blows. U. B. scored eight of the 11 runs in the first three innings. Scoring three runs in the sixth frame, the St. Mary's team chalked up an 8-6 victory over the Union I Chaple team In the nighcap. Each team obtained seven hits, with j Union Chaple’s eight misplays aid 5 Ing the victors. Industrial league games Thursday night are as follows: Schafer j vs. General Electric, Decatur Castlings vs. Central Sugar company. ' I R H E JU. B 134 100 2—ll 13 7 II Luth.-Bapt. <MH 000 0— 1 5 5 • I). Wynn and Hitchcock; G. 1 Strickler and Baughn. Union Chape) . 011 202 o—6 7 8 • St. Mary's 013 103 x—B 7 5 i Schnepp and Bailey; Murphy i and Andrews. o ; STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. St. Louis 32 17 .653 New York 28 22 .560 Pittsburgh 28 22 .560 Chicago .. 26 21 .553 Cincinnati . 24 26 .480 Boston . 24 27 .471 . Philadelphia 19 32 .373 (Brooklyn 19 33 .365 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. New York 34 17 .667 Boston -32 21 .604 Detroit 29 24 .547 Cleveland . 25 23 .521 Washington 26 25 .510 Chicago 23 25 .479 Philadelphia 16 32 .333 St. Louis 16 34 .320 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct. Milwaukee 31 20 .608 Kansas City 29 21 .580 Minneapolis 31 23 .574 St. Paul 31 25 .554 Columbus 27 30 .474 Indianapolis 21 27 .438 Louisville 24 32 .429 Toledo 18 34 .346 YESTERDAYS RESULTS National League Cincinnati, 15; New York, 4. Pittsburgh, 4-7; Enooklyn, 1-5. Chicago. 6: Philadelphia. 3. St. Louis. 7; Boston, 5. American League Washington, 2; Cleveland. 1. St. Louis. 5; New York, 3. Detroit, 8; Boston. 4. Chicago. 5; Philadelphia, 2. American Association Toledo. 7; St. Paul, 5. Minneapolis. 6-1; Columbus, 3-3. o LEADING BATTERS Player Club G AB R H Pct. Sullivan. Indians 22 108 16 44 .407 S. Martin, Cards 39 129 33 51 .395 | Terry. Giants . 29 76 16 30 .395 Gehringer, Tigers 53 225 52 82 365 Gehrig. Yankees . 51 199 61 72 .362 o HOME RUNS Foxx, Red Sox 14 Trosky. Indians 12 Ott, Giants 11 Gehrig. Yankees 11 Dickey. Yankees 9 J. Moore. Phillies 9 Goslin. Tigers 9 Laxzeri, Yankees 9 o Program Is Planned For Children’s Day A children's day .program, with 50 boys and girls presenting individual numberu, will be presented at the First Evangelical church Sunday morning at 10:10 o'clock.

OPEN DAY and NIGHT ROOPS RESTAURANT Sandwiches .... 5c -10 c CHICKEN DINNERS Wednesdays and Sundays. SIGNATURE ONLY LOANS No One Else Need Sign The SIMPISST and EASIEST WAY to burrow up to S3OO. Friends, relatives or employer WILL. NOT KNOW of your loan. Loans*also arranged on furniture, auto, livestock, etc. Call and learn. HF.Dt CKD COST We make loans up to S3OO, at less than that permitted by the law of our state governing small loans. See Us Before You Borrow Local Loan Co Over Schafer store Phone 2-3-7 Decatur, Ind.

HOGSETT HURLS WIN OVER YANKS ‘ St. Louis Browns Show Steady Improvement; • Giants Slip > New York, June 10 —(U.R) Rog--1 ers Hornsby told the boys back in • St. Louis that when he brought his Browns home they would not be dragging along at the tail eml ■ of the American league procesr sion, and today it appeared as if • he knew what he was taking about. ; Tlte Browns (began their current i road trip five games behind the > seventh place Philadelphia Athletics. but today they are only a game behind them and are playi ing a good brand of baseball for ; the first time this year. They r have won four out of their laut six games and 11 out of their last 09 Part of the success of the Hornsbynten is due to the fine pitching of Elon Hogsett. The big Indian was a, relief hurler for Detroit, but Hornsby's pitchers have to work plenty and Hogsett itas proved his worth by winning four ’ out of five games since joining up ' with St. Louis. He turned in his third victory of the road trip yesterday, lintiti ing the heavy hitting New York Yankees to five scattered hits. His chief triumph, however, was in besting Vernon (Lefty) Gomez. He was out there on the nioui) 1 still hurling 'em in there after the Browns shelled Lefty from the mound to take a 5 to 3 decision. The second place Boston Red Sox failed to take advantage of the Yanks’ defeat, losing to Detroit, 8 -to 4. The Chicago White Sox scored three runs in the loth on doubles by Radcliff. Washington, .and Bo nura and a single by Piet to defeat the Philadelphia Athletics. 5 to 2. Cleveland's Indians fell before the Washington Senators. 2 to 1 as Pete Appleton aJQowed four hits. ‘I ffl New York's Giants fell four and one half games behind the leading St. Louis Cardinals iu the National league by taking a 15 to 4 drubbing from the Cincinnati Reds while the Cards won 7 to 5 from Boston. Roy Henshaw pitched the Chicago Cubs to their second straight victory over the Phillies, 6 to 3. Despite the victory, the Cubs fell back into fourth place, a few percentage points behind the Pittsburgh Pirates w'ho swept a twin I bid from the Brooklyn Dodgers. Weaver was the winning pitcher in the Bites’ initial I tn 1 triqmph and Brown the victor in the 7 to 5 nightcap decision. Yesterday’s hero: Elon Hogsett, pitcher for the St. Louie Browns who attained his fourth victory by limiting the slugging Yankees to five hits. FIVE CONVICTS ARE AT LARGE Two Additional Escaped Criminal Insane Are Re-Captured St. Peter. Minn.. June 10 —(UP) — Wilburt Jorrissem and Ado’tph Walworth were captured near Cologne, Minn., today, leaving only five fugitives from the state hospital for criminally insane still at large. Os the five, the three most dangerous were last believed racing through lowa in a stolen car, one was being surrounded by a huge poese five miles north of St. Peter, and the last was thought holed up ' only a short distance away, though ’ he has not been sighted since the break. The trio, led by the cunning Lawrence DeVol, killer and bank robber of the defunct Barker-Karpis gang, sped into lowa yesterday but may have cut over into Illionis. A woman at Wilmette, 111., reported she gave a man resembling DeVol 15 cents when he accosted her o ANNUAL CHURCH f-C.9y.T- 1 -?-.— - 1 - FJI9? PViE ONE) for young people at the Wawasee convention —Clifford Clark. 2. Good times at the Wawasee convention —Dale House. 3. Class work at Wawasee — Otis Baker. 4. Why every church should have someone at the Wawasee convention —Rev. Chas. E. White. 5. What to take to the convention—Clara Lare. Business Song 1936 convention program by the Rev. S. A. Wells. Secretary's report Offering Check attendance Place for next rally Closing song. Benediction —Rev. Earl S- Hine. Social hour at Monroeville i churtch.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1936.

''l i srux \ believe \ t '« GNOSIS-) A - -i V* —r—-t- ■ »| ijiilU -FisTlc MAX SAYS’ 7H£ LOUIS BUGABOO ' : /S JUST A FAK£ SPOOK,'-- ■ - -

LOUIS REFUSES BRADDOCK BOUT Joe Louis’ Managers Demand 20 Per Cent Cut Os Gate Lakewood. N. J., June 10. —(U.R) — Mike Jacobs was stumped today for the first time since he stopped speculating in tickets and started tight-promoting. His chief moneymaker, Joe Louis, lias refused to sign a contract for a title bout with heavyweight champion Jimmy Braddock in September. Louis' co-managers gave a positive "no” to Jacobs here yesterday when he offered the Brown Bomber 12** per cent of the gate receipts. the regular share for the challenger in a championship bout. Bradock would get the champion’s usual 37Vi per cent. “We feel Joe is just as good a drawing card as Braddock." said manager No. 1. John Roxborough of Detroit. "His recent bouts with Baer, Camera, Uxcudtin, and Levinsky prove it.” “It would be unfair to Joe to have to begin training all over again when he gets througa with Schmeling.” added manager No. 2, Julian Black of Chicago. "Beside Joe would be fighting for mere glory since the government would get most of his share in income taxes. We want 20 per cent." SENDS CHECK (CONT INL'EP FROM PAGE ONE) descendents of John Reynolds living in this locality. Among these great, grandchildren is a concert band of about nine or ten pieces. These boys and girls are very accomplished musicians. "Wishing this movement success. I am, "Just an old Decatur Boy." o mrs. Roosevelt To Speak At Purdue Lafayette, Ind., June 10. —(U.R) — Mrs. Franklin Delano Roosevelt today accepted an invitation to speak at the Purdue University science and leadership institute oil Thurs-

ARGENTINE ROAD RACE WAS GRUELLING GRIND

Details of the Grand Circuit automobile race, 4,250 miles in length through Argentina and a part of Chile, are just becoming available. The race is a car-wrecker of the first order, according to all participants. When it is realized that 113 started the race and only 16 finished, some idea of the contour of the country through which the race passed, may be gathered. The fact that one of the lowest-priced American cars, a Terraplane, won the race is in itself remarkable, but when it is understood that this was the only 1936 Tetrsplane entered, the record is even more outstanding. Raul Riganti who won the race, is an old-timer and was a favorite of the public in this race from the very start. In this country we can hardly conceive of the interest that exists in South America in this road race. It is by all odds the most outstanding event of its kind in the world. The race has been growing in importance for several years. Each year the circuit has increased in length, scope and number of participants, until last year the Andes mountains were crossed for the first time into Chile, making the race an international event. The race started in Buenos Aires and ended in the nearby City of LaPlata. The route covered being as follows: Via Cordoba and Mendoza, across the Andes to Santiago, Chile, South to Temuco, Chile, back over to the Comodoro Rivadavia Oil Field, where it turns ' to skirt the Atlantic Coast of Argentina, through Bahia Blanca and Mar del Plata, before reaching the finish. Much es the course lies through heavy sand and soil roads. There is a great deal of clay, particularly in the

[day, June 17, on the subject of I housing. She will inspect Purdue’s I experimental housing project now /under construction. I Next Sunday morning Mrs. Roosevelt will accompany the president !to Vincennes where he will dedicate the George Rogers Clark ■I memorial. On Tuesday. June 16 | she will speak at Indianapolis and i spend the night as guests of Gov. I and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt. LOCAL FIRM IS i (CONTINUEC. FRO.J PAGE ONE) ■ Nye, employ of the McConnell com'l pany. Nye wan also named a defendi ant in the action. The suit, which had been venued from the Allen county court, was deliberated on It) hours by the • jury, after receiving their instructions at noon yesterday. Italy Will Again Default War Debt Washington. June 10 —(UP) —The ' state department today had receiv1j ed notice from Italy that it, like 1 Great Britain, intended to default on the >63.494.976 which it owes the U. S- treasury June 15 on account 1 of war debts. The Italian note .sent by Ambas--1 sador Augusto Russo, was in rqply ' to a routine notice by the department that the installment would be !! due. The amount due from Italy June 15, $63,494,976, includes $37,900,000 on principal, $5,472,604 in Interest and $4,480,779 under the Hoover moratorium, all in arrears; and sls, 641,593 currently due. Veteran Alabaman Congressman Loses Birmingham. Ala.. June 10 —(UP) ! — Rep. George Huddleeston, who has served in the lower house of i congress for more than two decades . was defeated in the state run-off Democratic primary, returns show- | ed today. Luther Patrick, comparatively un- > known attorney defeated the veteran Anti-new deal legislator by a decisive majority, tin 213 of the 236 - districts, Patrick was given 19. 819 ; votes gainst 13,503 for Huddleston,j , o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

rs i\ I < If > b I >' '"'l X ftWUQUtN r / > VfV I PUERTO 0 $ Jt a (( K VV S» I \ 2 Map of course of Til I D SouthAmerican \ \ 1 .fy road race claa\A I 1 / 4 aic. Os 113 enfl I iV finished. a\ / If Race was won (l\. J A byoniyl936TerX raplane entered. neighborhood of Cordoba, which it very slippery when wet and very dusty when dry. The course was covered in nine stages. Details of the race have become available through Will L. Smith, South American resident agent for the Sealed Power Corporation, which provided prizes for the winners of the last four laps. Raul Riganti in his Terraplane won this along with the race. A map of the circuit is shown herewith, _ -j

ROOSEVELT TO SPEAK TONIGHT President To Broadcast From Little Rock At 6 o’Clock Aboard Roosevelt special, en route to Hot Springs, Ark., June 10. ■—(U.R) President Roosevelt reached the revolt threatened bailiwick of his friend, Sen. Joseph T. Robinson, today on his "non political" tour of the southwest. The chief executive, who was joined by Mrs. Roosevelt at Memphis early this morning, came to Arkansas officially to participate in celebrating the 100th anniversary of the state’s admission to the Union. But his schedule called for a full day of appearances across the state, climaxed by a broadcast speech at Little Rock ending only a few minutes before former President Hoover's radio address from the Republican national convention in Cleveland. Despite frequent White House statements that the president's trip has no political intent, and Mr. Roosevelt’s own expressed hope that broadcasts of his speeches would not interfere with Repub- , lican radio time, observers saw a f decided campaign complexion to , his radio timing tonight and to the . crowds that greeted him everywhere. Mr. Roosevelt made a platform I appearance at Knoxville, Tenn., ■ where the train stopped 10 min- ; utes. To 1,000 or more persons he » expressed regret over the death of 1 Speaker Joseph W. Byrns of the house, a Tennesseean, and added that he hoped to return in the late summer or early fall for an inspection of TVA progress. Country groups of a few dozen persons and city crowds of hundreds flocked around the special • train at every station at which it ■ stopped. After his address in the centen- ■ nial stadium at 6 p. m. CST., he . will motor to the home of Senator ■ Joe Robinson, senate majority lead- • er, for dinner. The visit is interpreted in many quarters as an effort to help Robinson, who is

* SIZE A BONUS IN ★ ECONOMI Os all four leading low priced cars . . . Terraplane ALONE gives these big car values ui » k fc 7 iJfr^Vc, .?)''Oß FMaafc Bk SESBSK ■ * ' WMwMI < . ■ „.; . . < "’ • ■>' -•• ” | • , MOS' j "We sure got a lot for our money!" vjsfejjr 7\ ' ® * TERRAPLANE IS BIGGER with itslls-inch wheel- V /] base —up to 3 inches more than the other three lead- Vi ing low priced cars —more leg and shoulder room. f LN * IT'S MORE POWERFUL with 88 or 100 smooth 5 gOBI B horsepower —3 to 9 more than the others. * IT'S SAFER with Duo-Automatic Hydraulic Take a “DISCOVERY DUNE Brakes (patent applied for)—finest hydraulics, f| te Electric Hand with a separate safety braking system operating . O therlo» automatically from the same brake pedal if ever Tes ‘s,7? over a«r route you cto* needed. And a third braking system from the easy r ‘ eU furnish the «r. One ot ‘ hc ™“’ operating parking brake. ,hingsyou “^H^wit'hrtetw* * IT'S MORE ECONOMICAL— with an official rec- lllnd 1 extra. Flick.’ ord of 23.95 miles per gallon in the Los Angeles- —andgearsshitt! Yosemite Economy Run. nogear or brake lever 0 - IT'S MORE BEAUTIFUL with a design that is en- ~~~ ...„ H .P.... n5-' tirely new, not a modified 1935 style. ‘ _ IT'S MORE RUGGED— the only one of the four with •■-■’ body all of steel and seamless solid steel roof. J ‘’"'""litosoK’ WITH THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES s Radial Safety $ AVE _• • ■ ‘^l,"?. very Control (patent applied for). The Rhythmic Ride. !'-■•• “ I()nl hi y payments Tru-Line Steering. And many others. All# Jpttio i v«hn«i’ »««•• LEO KIRSCH, Terraplane Dealer I -— jnBRRAPLANI Let Decatur Owners Tell You Why They Bought HUDSONS HERE ARE A FEW .. . OTHER NAMES ON RfcU f Merfe r. ph° w t Lawrence Kleinhenz, 227 N. sth, phone 624 Mrs. Chas. hnapP* . . August Walter, 329 S. Ist, phone 1093 Curtis Hill. • — —- P. KIRSCH 0 SON „ s , PHONE 335 1 BUILT BT HUDSON—TERRAPLANE. SS9S AND HP; HUDSON SIX. S7IO Z, ND U? SUPER STRAIGHT EIGHT, 5760 AND UP, F O »- P E[£2- —

“The Th inkerM<|i ' —— | Joe Louis — fIL <( 1 WwWi i My/ / L_ ' This photo might be captioned, “The Thinker—l 936 Model” b it is more likely that the only mental exercise in which Heavy/rt Contender Joe Louis is Indulging as he takes time out from tramim at Lakewood, N. J., is how he can most effectively "put jj, Schmeling when the two meet in New York

none too sure of re-election this I fall. At the wind-up G»‘ tre Arkansas : festivities the president and his ] party will set out for Texas, where ' tomorrow, Friday, ana part of Sat- , urday he will participate in I’ne Texas centennial celebration, visit i ing Houston, San Antonio. Austin, : Dallas, Fort Worth, and Dennison, ' before turning northeastward for I Vincennes. Ind. 0 Blood Donors Flip Coin TOLEDO (U.R) - Two University ' of Toledo athletes, Charles Cupp

t > and Charles Hennessy, flippy coin in the corridor of Toledo | 1 1 pital. Cupp won. ho be ente . the uperatitig room, rolled up . ' sleeve, and geve a pint o( . | blood to Dr. Philip C. Nash, pi , I dent of the university, who i .ill. , I Church Board Meets i hursday Event The official hoars ot the F | Christian church will met in r I church parlors Thursday em p at 7:30 o'clock.