Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 23 October 1936 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Commodores To Open Season November jj

ALL REGULARS ARE LOST FROM 1935-36 TEAM Entirely New Team Must Be Built This Season By Laurent Faced with the herculean task, »t molding an entirely new quintet, the Commodores, Decatur Catholic high school's basketball team, have been working strcnuously for the past two weeks in - an effort to get into the best poss-' ibie condition for the season open- ' er. Twenty-one games are on the. 1936-37 schedule. The Commodores will open the season on the home floor Friday night, November 13, meeting St. John's of Lima, Ohio. The second game of the season will pit the Commodores against an old rival. Huntington Catholic, also on the local floor Tuesday. November 17. This will be the first meeting of these teams after a lapse of a few seasons. One of the feature games on the schedule this year will be the appearance on the local floor of St. Theresa of Decatur. Illinois. The Illinois team, which will play here Tuesday. December 29, is coached by Marty Peters, former football and basketball star at Notre Dame, who graduated last spring Coach George Laurent is facing a severely difficult task in putting a winning team on the floor tins season. Four of last year's five regulars graduated and the fifth regular, ■ Bud Hain, is attending school in, Chicago this year. Only one letterman is available

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from the 1935-3*6 squad. Bob Hess is the lone letterman to return to school. Candidates who have shown promise of developing Into good material, and who saw action last I season with the second team, are I Art Baker. Glllig. Bill Voglewede, Bierly, Cook, Alberdlng. Bolinger I I and Kuhnle. I Coach Laurent is being assisted this season by Bob Braden, regular ’ center last season. Pat Murphy, also a regular last year, is conducting practice session for the eighth grade team. The complete schedule follows: Nov. 13- St. John's of Lima, •)., at Decatur. Nov. 17 - Huntington Catholic at Decatur. Nov. 24 Jefferson at Decatur. Nov. 27 Kirkland at Kirkland. Dec. 4 St. Mary's /. Anderson | at Decatur. Dec. 8 St. Paul at Marion. I Dec. 11 St. John's at Delphos, Ohio. Dee. 17—Kirkland at Decatur. Dec. 18 —St. John's at Lima, O. Dec. 29—St. Theresa of Decatur. 111., at Decatur. Ind. Jan. I—Monroeville at Monroeville. Jan. B—Central Catholic of Fort Wayne at Decatur. Jan. 15—Elmhurst at Decatur. Jan. 19 — Celina. Ohio Catholic at Decatur. Jan. 27 — Hartford township at Hartford. Jan. 29—St. Mary's at Anderson. Feb. 4—Central Catholic at Fort Wayne. Feb. s—St.5 —St. John's of Delphos at Decatur. Feb. 10 —Huntington Catholic at Huntington. Feb. 16—St. Paul of Marion at Decatur. Feb. 10 —Celina Catholic at Celina, Ohio. o Unwieldy “Cnrrency” In ancient Cyprus, coppc pot* fnv n* , ‘ no V

Decatur Bowling League Results* A group of Decatur bowlers defeated Rockford, Ohio, Tuesday night at Rockford, 2.658 pins to 2.388. The score by gumen follown: lows: Decatur Ahr 11*4 168 211 I Hoehn 175 193 174 ! Laitkenau 165 144 800 I Mutschler . 170 187 188 Stump 191 116 222 Total 2658 Rockford I Temple 155 143 165 1 Dull 122 149 153 Sidenbender 146 148 160 '(’lay 145 173 206 I Surtaer 183 165 175 Total 2388 MERCHANTS LEAGUE — Auto License Fryback 10l 117 121 Melchi 98 129 113 Jackson 114 148 153 J. Lose 142 144 184 , R. Lose 101 C, Reid 161 100 Total 556 689 671 Gerber's Market B. Woodhall 130 162 124] Gerber S 3 101 1641 Cole ... 170 125 109 K Woodhall 154 146 140 iDeVor 116 1 R. Woodhall . 95 148, 1 Total. 653 629 685 ( — Douglas Co. Baker 124 111 124 Metzler 137 133 118 Ehinger 110 99 130 Gilliom 154 123 135 Reynolds ... 164 188 121 : Total 689 C 54 628 Green Kettle Coffee 129 113 119 Hoffman 166 101 147 Frisinger 116 135 104 Murphy 110 162 163 Brunnegraff 134 102 150 Total 664 663 6g3 Mies Recreation Martin 125 155 196 Hunt 138 142 101 Liechty ... 11l 161 109 Lister 159 144 156 Hancher 144 166 147 T0ta1677 768 709 Schaffer Rumple . 112 148 132 Teeple 114 127 94 Alberding .. 119 77 Tope 167 147 144 Walters 158 167 Total6l2 657 637 o Today’s Sport Parade (By Henry McLemore) Pittsburgh, Oct. 23. —(U.R)—Braced by a few tonic draughts of this city’s justly celebrated air. I climbed the steep hill leading to the athletic offices of the University of Pittsburgh yesterday, in search of Coach Jock Sutherland. Coach Sutherlands boys, who | are known as Panthers, play the l Irish of Notre Dame at football

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1936

//£// LOOK X ’OUT' > THATi A BOMB K ) Mr a Football. t Xlrt f I ~ " . soar' ' , Ck ■ j , 4 TSy • i4lr AliF TMv vtilK Jgg aMW £ SMACKS EM '\ MAXHAM " 3R DHAM _ (_ ' - ST MA AYS ' J C * y I ife'A j 50 w ■ 1 \ TOush . cqatt w X Tl-AMX V • IWfHFAJ \ n* B 1 gam Mcrr inc X -x * <- ; 1 ** HS - * xsSt V X (*,*l c **N*6r- * \ * IF x *g>**&j7

tomorrow, and I wanted to ask him the uraal batch of dfereotyped questions sportswriters always ask I when they arrive to cover a game: ' namely, who's hurt, who isn't hurt. 1 who may get hurt? Who’s gonna play, who’s not gonna play, who may play? Who’s gonna win. who's not gonna win. who may tie?' I didn't get a chance to put these pregnant questions to Doctor Sutherland as he was in an im - provised studio studying pictures of last Saturday's game which Pitt : lost to Duquesne, 7 to 0. I could I have gone into the studio and seen I him, of course, but frankly I’m not' that brave. Interviewing Doctor > Sutherland right after he unex- i pectedly inherited J 10.000.000 would have been tough enough, and the i thought of trying to talk to him I while he was watching pictures of his team being beaten by a team which should never have done it, quailed even so resolute a heart as mine. Incidentally, there is gossip in, this town by the Monongahela. I that the Marquis of Queensbury I would have been a bit shocked by the rude tactics of the Duquesne players. I heard from one of the urell known “men of the street" that the referee should have rung the bell after each three minutes of play if only to make the Duquesne boys feel at home. But to get back on the hill. Unable—or rather unwilling—to see Sutherland, I obtained a Pitt-Notre Dame player poster. 5 had not read more than half of it when I came to this very definite conclusion : Coach Sutherland and Coach Elmer Layden of Notre Dame must be the two outstanding football coaches in America today. How else, along with having to teach football tactics to their squads, could they possibly remember the names of the men who

form the bulk of their material? On the field for Plttsourgii tomorrow there will be this possible eleven: Daddio, Matisi, Raskouski. Lezouski, Stapoulis. Dalle Tezze, Merkovsky, Chickerneo. Troglione, Asa-1 vitch. and Spotovich. ! And for Notre Dame we may see . Steimkemper. Kuharich. Wojchiviski. Sadowski. Borowski. Rogenski. Binkowski. Kovakcik, Kopczak. Levicki. and Puplis. For a coach to teach an involved i spinner play to players named : Brown, Smith, and Jones is diffiI cult enough. But for a coach to ■ work out a play that goes Togllone ito Asavitch to Raskouski must take his mind completely off football. And to have to summon I Stapoulis. Binkowski. and Wojchiv- ■ , ski from a distant part of the field wouldn’t help to get it back on football. (Copyright 1936 by UP.) Dance Sunday Sunset ' —— l ———

SUN. MON. TUES. 111 Bl J laß 10c Matinee 1:45 Sunday . II r Evenings 10c-20c THEY TRIED TO PIN THIS KILLING ON A WOMAN! The police thought they had enough clues to hang her but two cocky newspapermen uncover the real solution to the y« ar 's — most baffling murder mystery. 1g8»* GA"- CO-OP’ 0 " A > Pool t,„..<co>w-’ !' gg& K e .?nny * oker .n.^« dby feJWEI W — Added Treats — Oswald Cartoon; Sportlight; Gus Van Musical; Pictorial. ■■ bb««sbb o—o — TONIGHT and SATURDAY — Everybody’s favorite—fightin’, shootin', ridin’ BUCK JONES in “TREASON” ALSO—“The Phantom Rider”; “The Clutching Hand”; and Color Cartoon. TONIGHT ONLY ONE DIME Saturday 10c-15c—First Show at 6:30.

FORESEE MAJOR TEAMS BEATEN' I I United Press Writers Say Notre Dame, Indiana ] To Win (Copyright 1936 by UP.) < New York. Oct. 23. —<U.R) Five of the nation’s major undefeated, ( untied football teams will b« blast- ( ‘ed from the ranks of perfect elev- ( ens tomorrow, according to United Press sports writers. Eleven teams will preserve their clean slates, two of them at thej expense of elevens who will enter games with perfect records. The teams which will suffer their first setbacks are Fordham, Pur-! due. Marquette, North Carolina, and Georgetown. Holy Cross. I Notre Dame, Army, Yale, Villa i nova, Minnesota, Michigan State. Northwestern. Duke, Texas A. & | | M. and Duquesne will remain tinI defrated. Purdue will be stopped by Mini nesota which will score its 21st (Consecutive victory while Marj quette will be halted by Michigan State. i The selections: East St. Mary's over Fordham; Holy' Cross over Carnegie Tech; Notre I Dame over Pittsburgh; Navy over Princeton; Detroit over Manhattan; Cornell over Penn State; Colgate over N. Y. U. over Georgetown; Pennsylvania over i Brown; Army over Springfield; , Yale over Rutgers; Viilanova over Boston U. Maryland over Syracuse, I ! and Duquesne over West Virginia Wesleyan. Midwest Minnesota over Purdue; Michi-' gan State over Marquette; Indiana over Ohio State; Northwestern over Illinois; Columbia over Michigan; Kansas State over Kansas; lowa State over Missouri, and Nebraska over Oklahoma. South Duke over Tennessee; Louisiana I State over Arkansas; Mississippi over Catholic U.; Auburn over Georgia; Kentucky over Florida; Georgia Tech over Vanderbuilt; | Tulane over North Carolina; North Carolina State over V. P. 1 I and Virginia over WasTiington and

Pacific Coast Washington over California; Southern California over Stanford; I U. C. L. A. over Oregon Stale, • and Washington State over On-' gan. Southwest Texas A. and M. over Baylor; I Rice over Texas, and Texas Chris-' tian over Mississippi State. Rocky Mountain Utah over Utah State; Colorado over Colorado State; Denver over I Wyoming: Colorado College over! Colorado Mines; Greeley Teachers I over Western State, and Montana ' over Montana State. ROOSEVELT IS (CONTINUED FROM PAGM ONH) special train shortly aUer mid-' night. His 300-mile automobile! [ trip through the strong eastern industrial areas was the occasion I for tumultous welcomes In states I claimed by Republicans. Police estimated more than 1,1000,000 people turned out to see' and hear the president deliver about two score addresses, the bulk of which hammered home the

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