Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 276, Decatur, Adams County, 20 November 1936 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

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JACKETS OPEN HOME SEASON HERE TONIGHT Yellow Jackets Meet New Haven Bulldogs On Local Floor The Decatur Yellow Jackets, with one close victory under their belts, will make their first appearance of the 1936-37 season on tne home floor tonight. The Jackets will play the New Haven Bulldogs in the home opener tonight, with the varsity game scheduled to get underway at 8:15 o'clock. The reserve teams of the two schools will meet in the preliminary at 7 o'clock. Decatur nosed out a 38-27 victory over the Portland Panthers last Friday night at Portland, after an overtime period. New Haven will have several games experience edge over the Yellow Jackets twhen they meet tonight. The Bulldogs last night defeated the Monroeville Cubs at Monroeville, 36 to 25. Decatur is expected to have its full strength available for tonight's tilt. Three members of the squad, benched last week by school discipline rules, will see action. New Haven's scoring last night was well divided, with Dienelt, a guard, and Bowers, center, the leading scorers. The Bulldogs have nrovt<«o4 rv>. eatur with plenty of opposition in ■■■■■■■MBMBManawn' xx--GILLIG & DOAN Funeral Directors 24 Hour Ambulance Service. Lady Attendants. Phone Phene H. M. Gillig J M. Doan 7M 1041 >W—WWiI !■ ,

sun - mon - tves - BN IM Continuous show Sunday -iw* from 1 o’clock. teMaßmwgas F .- . . . 1 I ...wholes 1 i sing and dare? ■ ■ r :p- -f 'Vjf .J| i nQ i ■ donees to live! «J3&jLr.Zexlli TEMPHq Dimplesw* J - FRANK MORGAN HELEN WESTLEY ;'«? > ROBERT KENT ASTRID ALLWYN Jp* " w ' DELMA BYRON THE HALL ; ,jw / JOHNSON CHOIR / Stepin FETCHIT Se;.,, / SUNfltrAdults 25c, Children 10c till 5 o clock Sunday after 5 o’clock—Adults 35c, Children 10c Continuous show Monday-Tuesdav from 2 o’clock 0 — TO-NITE — AN OUTSTANDING FEATURE “TAKA CHANCE NITE” ONLY 10c o — Saturday — GENE AUTRY - SMILEY BURNETTE “THE SINGING COWBOY” PLUS--Ken Murray; Oswald Comedv; All Color Travelogue, Chapter 10 “DARKEST AFRICA." ONLY 10c-15c Continuous show from 2 o’clock. —O COMING — JANE WITHERS “PEPPER” with Irwin S. Cobb - Slim Summerville.

♦ ♦ Week’s Schedule For Adams County Basketball Teams ♦ ♦ Saturday Monroe vs. Monmouth at Berne, previous seasons, latst year, the opening tilt of the season, the Yellow' Jackets barely nosed out a 22-21* verdict over the Allen county quintet. Coach Andrews was uncertain today of his starting five, as the squad has not been in action sufficiently to determine the most effective combination. Only one of last year's regulars is playing this season, with the other four lost by graduation. Bob Worthman, a guard, tn the only regular playing this season. Tonight's probable lineups: Decatur New Haven Heller .... F Parks McConnell F Bandelier Smith, Beery F . Parks Hurst C Bowers Worthman G . Arter Brodbeck G .Dienelt FreidtG Shriek Officials. Geller and Somers (Ft. Wayne. o H. 8. BASKETBALL New Haven 36. Monroeville 25. 801 l 26. Chester Center 22. o Krick-Tyndall Co. Has Group Insurance New Yor. Nov. 2'— The KrickTyndall Company, building tile and ti’e pipe manufacturing concern, of Decatur, Ind has announced the adoption of a group insurance program providing its employees with ■icknee sand accident benefits. The announcement was made by George M. Krick, president of the company. The Plan is being underwritten by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company on a cooperative basis [whereby the employer and the employees share the cost. Each em- [ ployee enrolled in the plan will receive $lO. a week in case of sickness I or non-occupational Injury. o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

J ’ ’ —dr- ’ r-/ 7W 8u; l£T < > 1 B -0.4 T OJT FNAfBk MiNKISOT* ■ TM £h4T i Afo. vd n-r / A « —* w \ r* f if A •■•■4 . sac toxj . 4 sk, vw ? . ■ • jxJA \ j MJ* x ur--v - -Wl —=4 w < • ' * a x ■ Steve f. z <4 7 —©Fin 75SF«~. •LrsCiP- ■ . W&jr rat] LEAPBB OF MORTH- "JCIAMtw* -rwr - • WESTERNS guepuf ■:*':A>r OuntUfcOiw; .kAjAf FA/'hOE" ftJUSUg- SCDMCsTTW'... 'nALL'UKrI*ll** kl*!**H I I I rtOTf* iel. and a brother. Arthur of SpencCt NTR AL LOSES ;.i“ ■ - — OPENING GAME Decatur Bowling | League Results Local Eighth Grade Team • „ ERCHANT LEAOUt Loses To Ohio City, 30 To 11 Gerber Market ' Woodhall ,i 168 100 162 The Central eighth grade team R. Cole 134 110 186 lost its opening game of the seas- Gerber 128 139 106 on Thursday afternoon, dropping a Peterson .. 189 116 144 30-11 decision to the Ohio City, K. Woodhall 146 152 Ohio junior high school team at G. Cole — 122 the Yellow Jacket gymnasium. — — Ohio City held an 11-5 margin Total .65 61. .20 at the half, and increased its lead Schafer in the second half. Kelley was McClure 176 153 156 nigh scorer for Ohio City with six Rumple 108 132 128 field goals for 12 points. Fuhr- Walters 149 136 210 man was high for Central with one — 100 100 .... field goal and three foul tosses. Tope 150 145 159 Central FG FT TP Flemming 116 Chilcote, f 10 2 Schnepp. f. ... ... 10 2 Total 683 666 .69 Fuhrman, c,l 3 5 Sherry, g. * 0 0 0 Green Kettle Krick, g. .0 0 0 Hunter 167 137 159 Rickord, f 10 2 Hoffman 151 165 103 Eichorn. f. .... 0 0 0 Frisinger 143 85 113 Fruchte, g 0 0 0 Murphy 137 136 163 — — — Brunnegraff 140 159 163 Totals . 4 3 11 — Ohio City FG FT TP Total 738 682 701 Smith, f 10 2 Auto License Kelley, f 6 0 12 p Fryback 116 105 146 •velsey. e 1 0.2 White ; 112 97 104 Krugh, g 0 11 j Djerkes 133 146 117 Akler, g 4 1 9 c Melchi 89 124 87 Custer, f 0 0 0 100 100 100 Summerset, g1 0 2 ~ Stetler, g. 10 2 Totalsso 572 554 Totais 11 2 30 Douglas Referee, Dorwin (Decatur.. Baker 140 m lf>4 . ~ Fuhrman 148 143 139 I mon City Business Metzler 153 127 Man Suicide Victim Qiniom 134 109 109 Ehinger 146 109 Union City. Ind., Nov. 20. —(U.R) Reynolds 151 132 —Allen P. Rice, 54, Hillsdale “ ' (Mich.l college trustee, was found Total72l 654 661 dead in his home last night, shot Mies Recreation through the mouth with a small Hancher 151 147 181 calibre revolver. P. Hunt 133 110 110 Police said Rice, prominent Un- Leichte 99 159 145 ion City business man, shot him- B. Hunt 93 133 163 self. His wife, who discovered the Strickler 123 212 202 body when she returned from an —•— — automobile trip, could give no mo- Total 599 761 801 tive for suicide. o Rice, Hillsdale college graduate Sutton’s Jewe'ry Store Opens and World War veteran, is surviv- Sa’urdav. First Door North ed by be widow, llis father. Dan- of winAes Shoe Store. TONIGHT FIRST HOME GAME OF THE SEASON YELLOW JACKETS - vs - New Haven Bui Dogs BIG GAME 8:15 P. M. PRELIMINARY 7 P. M. YELLOW JACKET - NEW HAVEN SECONDS Don’t miss the Opening Game! Season tickets to all home games are selling for $3.50 and may be purchased at the door tonight.

DFCATCR DAILY DFMOCRAT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1936

ALL-BIG TEN TEAM CHOSEN Four Northwestern Players Picked On AllStar Eleven Chicago, Nov. 20.—■<U.» ~Northwestern's Wildcats, < hampions of the Big Ten and ranking contenders ior the mythical national title, placed four men on the first allconference honor team compiled today by the United Press. For the first time in three years, ! the Wildcats broke Minnesota's strangle hold oil the first eleven, but still it was one of the mighty Gohpers who was acclaimed above all the rest. Ed Widseth, all-America and allconference tackle of 1935, catne back stronger than ever this season and was hailed the player of the year by more than 75 coaches, i scouts, writers and players. Minnesota landed two men on the first team, Ohio State two. Illinois one, Indiana one and Purdue one. On the second eleven were three Northwestern players, three from Minnesota and one each from Michigan, Ohio State, Indiana, lowa and Purdue. With manpower the key to gridiron success this season, frequent substituting by most coaches kept down the number of great linemen. but three were so many excellent backs the first and second selections virtually were interchangeable. Standouts on the first team included Widseth, Capt. Merle Wendt of Ohio State, all-confer-ence for two straight years; Capt. Steve Reid of Northwestern and John Drake, highest scoring half of Purdue's touchdown twins. The ends were Wendt and John Kovatch of Northwestern. Wendt was the star of the giant Buckeye line —a brillint defensive player and pass receiver. He caught one touchdown pass against Northwestern. Kovatch. in addition to defensive ability, was a constant threat as a ball carrier. No team in the conference successfully stopped him on end-around plays. Widseth and Charley Kamrick. Ohio State, gave the team the finest balanced pair of tackles in the circuit. It was Widseth's year His aggressiveness completely oowled over most opponents, and when they came along his side they found him too experienced. Hamrick weighs 245 pounds, 20 more than Widseth. Os the linemen, the guards were hardest to select. Considering Reid and Les Schreiber of Northwestern. Inwood Smith, Ohio State; Charley Schultz. Minnesota, and Cliff Kuhn of Illinois, the final ballot picked both Northwestern stars. Coach Lynn Waldorf himself couldn't say which was the better. Reid was the offensive and Schreiber the defensive key of a championship eleven. El Sayre, the 180-pound dynamo SUN. MON. TUES. Great Double Feature Show! 10c Matinee 1:45 Sunday A thousand convicts cheered when the ruthless district attorney, who twisted justice to win power, was himself trapped by circumstantial evidence! vXj A Paramtvnl Pktwre whh x Mersho Hlrnt. Robsrt Cvminiiip HI • Past Kelly, Ktat Taylor - — ADDED THRILLER — Death answered the bell at “The House of Secrets”! Were Its occupants living demons or shadowy ghosts! ‘THE HOUSE OF SE RETS” Leslie Fenton, Muriel Evans. Evenings 10c-20c -O--— -— TonlgM Knd Saturday — BUCK JONES • n “WHITE EAGLE” PLUS — Second thrilling chapter, “ACE DRUMMOND”; Krazy Kat Cartoon & Novelty. Tonight ONLY ONE DIME. Saturday 10c-15c First Show 6:30

fighting hix heart out in coni ' <r of slob Zuppkc's light Illinois! lino, hociime the first tonni center by a (leelalvo margin. Sayre wan about all Zup had on defense. He ' made np for If is lack of helfi with j an alert mind. The quarterback i« Fred Vanzo,' Nctthweatern'x plugging back who proved once more the short ent to j fame is speed, blocking and tackling. This 215-pouttd Wildcat was a star In the mlddlewest's big game of the year, making approximately 25 tackles and opening up a touchdown hole against Minnesota. Charles (Bud) Wilkinson. Minnesota, fell just short In the [tolling. I Vernon Huffman, Indfhna's triple threat quarterback, paired at the halves with Andy i'ram of Minnesota. who gained the distinction of being the best ball carrier in the Big Ten. Both were good enough to pust Don Heap of Northwestern and Cecil Isbell of Purdue back to the second team. Both are triple threats, although Huffman Is a better passer. Drake, right halfhack at Purdue, received more votes than any other back. Since he once was Noble Kizer's fullback, he was shitted to that position on the ail-conference team. Drake's speed and drive made him the hardest man to stop in the circuit. q — Dance Sunday Sunset STATE GARDENS MIDDLEBURY Royal Cottonman and His Colored Boys will be with us SATURDAY and SUNDAY November 21 and 22

■TWIWIWHFI sun. MON. tues. only Continuous Sunday from IP. M. 10c-25t / ’ m Wk MM m■< .if/ ft /.AlWßif kJ 3 j i || Nobel Prize Winner SINCLAIR LtrjiS k HlifjilO Pulitzer Prize Winner SIDNEY u howahd Famed Producer SAMUEL GOLDWYN ..thi» winning combination CAM nnncu/APTH fH « which gave the world Arrowsmith Sgjj was fairly broad-minded— f;<, has again '.mited to create .<- 'IWI.L s x trs fl a «<»»-' -*• for gay parties and good A Aj . EXTRAtimes? He wanted her to slfii S: i?g’ K fff)V f //^f7?Z^* ,^4rt, vt® be happy—but should he vtvvwrUMKr <^V***** , ’5r in Sprt'l’ let her enjoy herself at g%y *'W " V - Sl ® .< "» l| tg HA S THt HOXOt TO r«t«N' —JI H SINCLAIR LEWIS’ DoilS WORTH | . ith WALTER HUSTON 6 RUTH CHATTERTON and on the road! Millions — ___ -- | PML LUKAS-MARI ASTOB And now nilliotu mora will ; . r,*wirx KllWCkl WILLIAM WYI^ 1 * ’’"’“J ... th. supsrb picturiM. j|.. Md DAY!D N IVEN WILLIAm tion oi thi. grut pris. itory 1 . < Screenplay by SID NE Y HO.* — TONIGHT AND SATURDAY — Tonight You’ll yell yourself hoarse! A tremendous story of the , S’ls JolGHffi gridiron from Francis Wallace's thrilling Novel! 31 ■ • ' jETOfijME 'THE BIG GAME” Philip Huston, James Gleason, June Travis, Bruce - Added l re abot, Andy Devine. Guinn Williams and EIGHT ALL- . . a nd AMERICAN FOOTBALL STARS including Skakespeare Phil S . p '! a sport^ t: ■'f Notre Dame. Berw’anger of Chicago. Bobby Wilson, Orcnestr. • ‘ 2 5c So. Methodist; King Kong Klein, N. Y. U., and others. News. COMING — Jean Harlow’, William Powell, „ Myrna Loy, Spencer Tracy “LIBELED LADi

DeKalb County Man Champ Corn Grower! I Lafayette, Ind.. Nov. 20. qj.p) Karl Pankop. DeKnlh county was 1 j Indiana s champion high yie]<| corn [grower today after his victory in the annual contest of the •ve-acre corn club, sponsored by the Indi-

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