Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 70, Decatur, Adams County, 23 March 1937 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

DEFENSE WORK STRESSED FOR ANDERSON FIVE Coach Chadd Stresses Defense For Anderson Indians Editor’s Note: The Vnited Press today presents the first of four artieles reviewing the four finalists in the state high sclnsil liusketliall tournament which will be concluded next Saturday at Butler University fieldhouse.) By Gene Dailey (Vnited Press stuff correspondent) Indianapolis. Mar. 23 J.P) An old basketball adage aptly expresses the hardwood strategy of Coach Archie ChAdd's Anderson I Indians a good defense is the best offense. For four years Chadd has been practicing that philosophy at Anderson and he had been rewarded by having his teams in the finals — Last Time Tonight — "GARDEN OF ALLAH" Marlene Dietrich. Charles Boyer. ALSO —Mickey Mouse. Musical & Novelty. 10c-25c WED. & THURS. Matinee Thursday at 1:30 A Big Special introducing a new personality — the celebrated stage star Francine Larrimore in a great role worthy of her exceptional talents! SPITE MARRIAGE B **** BP 'S a. 1 .HDt ■kMM With GEORGE BANCROFT. (Jail Patrick. John Trent. —o—o— Friday & Sat. — "SEA DEVILS" Victor McLaglen, Preston Foster, Ida Lupino. -*0 Coming Sunday — The Laugh Hit of the Century! “THAT GIRL FROM PARIS" Jack Oakie, Gene Raymond. Lily Pons, Herman Bing. — <HO> - Last Time Tonight - Two Entertainment Hits! •MURDER GOES TO COLLEGE” Roscoe Karns, Lynne Overman, Larry Crabbe, Marsha Hunt & “THEY WANTED TO MARRY” Betty Furness, Gordon Jones. Only 10c-20c _—o—o— Fri. & Sat. — Charles Starrett in “WEST BOUND MAIL.” —o Coming Sunday—Two More Hits! "A WOMAN IN DISTRESS" May Robson, Irene Hervey & "CONFLICT” John Wayne, Jean Rogers.

at Buller fieldhouse three times. In 1934. Anderson bowed to Tech'nieul (Indianapolis) in regional ' piny. Next year, the Indians won I the state chinnpionship. laist season Andeison was eliminated by I Frankfort which ultimately won 1 1 the title. 1 This year. Archie and his Indians ' are back again. Next week end the Anderson ng- . gregntion will compete In the finals against Central i Fort Wayne),Rochester and Huntingburg. During sectional competition this : I year. Anderson's opponents averag-' 'ed only 12 points per game. In regional play it was 15' 2 while last weekend in the semi-tinul meet the average raised to IS points. Coach Chadd Is a firm believer ‘ in the necessity of a tight defense In fact the wily little net mentor! spends the greater portion of his' lime polishing the Indians' defense Carl Bonge. assistant coach, hand les much of the offensive prepara- : tion. A major factor in Anderson's I success is the six-man team idea 1 which Chadd employs. Bill Goss and Frankie Clemons I usually start at the forward positions: Jim Hughes. 6-foot, threeinch pivot man. gets the call at center and Russell Higginbotham and Wally Davis start at the guard I berths. The sixth man is Charley Rich unison. Chadd's "ace in the hole." , Richardson is alternated with Goss at forward. The latter, not quite so rugged as the rest, frequently is pulled out of the game and Richardson sent in to provide the scoring punch to the ball club. ■ On the technical side, Anderson uses effective block plays. Any member of the team is a good “spot" shisiter over these blocks, or they can be converted into driving plays with Clemons or southpaw Davis doing the scoring. Anderson's real forte is its aggressiveness. however. The Indians can give as well as take and their opponents seldom find an oppor-' tunity to loaf tinder the basket. The Indians did not get a day : of rest yesterday after their work i in the Indianapolis semi-final tour-| ney last Saturday. Chadd frowns on such tactics. “You have to work in tourna■eut play, and I mean work," he | CORT ♦ « — Last Time To-Nite — PAT O'BRIEN-SYBIL JASON THE GREAT O’MALLEY’ PLUS—Comedy; News; Peter Van Steeden and Orchestra. 10c -25 c WED.-THUR. -■ ' i j L *■*» “* ■■ 31 I / z y«r/wT Bf | ' HUS ... W ; V lm m W I to Mar | j mum hr I I 1 IEMINS I sf 2 fi ■ iow(u I HIHM I inn uHMont E HUGHES IH Lf/JB sh«w SMI ■ — Added Fun — Pat Rooney, Jr., Herman Timber?. Jr., “HOLD IT” and Pinky Lee “Dental Follies.” FRIDAY “TAKA CHANCE NITE" -10 c ♦ • Matinee Friday starting at 1:30 | ♦ ♦ Coming — Dick Powell - Madeliene Carroll l “ON THE AVENUE" Alice Faye - Ritz Bros. Stepin Fechit.

said. “I’m not taking u chanco of I those kids letting down at this ! stage of the game." "We made some mistakes . . , ; plenty of ’em ... in this toitrna- | nieul, mid we must correct them.” Q the Training Camps | By United Press e • Reds Tampa, Fla., March 23 —(UP) — General manager Warren Giles of Cincinnati announced that commissioner Lundin had a working agreement between the Rede and Syracuse of the International league. Jack Corbett, President of the Syracuse Club, also grunted Giles an option to renew the agreement in 1938. In return for first call on Syracuse players. Cincinnati i sent outfieJders Lee Gamble and Al Hunt and infielder Arnold Moser to the Chieftain training camp at , < 'harlotle. N. C Giants Edgewater Park. Miss., Manager Rill Terry ie so pleased with his New York Giants for winning their ; last six exhibition games that he announced today the ineup will put in the field to retain the National [ Ix-ague pennant. Fitzsimmons will get the opening pitching assignment with Mancuso catching. Two newI comers, McCarthy and Chiozza, will lie on first an dthird. respectively. ! Whitenhead and Bartliell will lie back at second und short with Ott in right field. Lieber in center and Moore in left. Cubs I Avalonfi Santa Catalina Island. Cal.—The Chicago Cubs, their final intra-dub game cancelled by rain i yesterday, planned to spend the remmaining three days here in batting practice for Friday's opener against the Chicago White Sox at Los Angeles. White Sox Pasadena. Cal., — Young Steve Mesner, Rookie who was handed the third base job as soon as he landed in the Chicago White sox camp, smarted today under the oratory of manager James Dykes. Dykes, cha- ■ grilled at the game the Sox put up against the coast League Angels threatened to yank him from the regulars unless he shows more I aggressiveness Dykes spoke his mind to the Sox : yesterday, in lieu of a workout which was cancelled by rain Pirates San Bernardino, Cal.. — Waite Hoyt and L'oyd Waner were on the Pittsburgh Pirates' sick list today with light tatacks of influenza. Risking no further illness, manager Pie Traynor hustled his team into the orange show building for a drill yesterday when snow fell steadily for two hours. Cardinals Leesburg. Fla.. —Manager Frankie Frisch was worried about the weak hitting of his St. Louis Cardinals as he brought his team here for an exhibition against the Rochester Internationa league farm club. The cards lost their second straight to Columbus. 5 to 3. yesterday. Garnering only seven hits off a trio of hurlere. Yankees St. Petersburg, —The New York Yankees entertained the Brooklyn Dodgers in an exhibition here today. Both teams were licked yesterday, the world champions dropping a 5 to 3 decision to their Newark farm club, while the Dodgers were outslugged, 9 to 6, by Cincinnati. o— SCHOOL HEADS < CONTI WT’RVI B-TJOV ----V . >»’> • intentions. They were not aware I of what proper installation of gas equipment was. and did not know the danger.” The New London school was known as the richest rural school 'in the world. It was a $1.000,00P institution, with seven producing oil and gas wells on its campus. ' but the school board believed it would be to its credit to cut the operating costs. Survivors among the New London children, many of whom are in bandages suffering from minor wounds, will have no classes for at least ten days. The main building that was destroyed by the blast will have to be rebuilt. T. R. Duran, the principal, said he had given no thought to reopening, and would not until the children recovered from their fright. The Red Cross tentatively set the death list at 455, but several of the names could not be accounted for, some admittedly were duplicated, and the final count possibly would be lower, near the 426 established by the United Press. o GOTTSCHALK IS fPROM PAaw ONW> system in the institutions and i leaves it for only those employes | administering the social security j program. Gottschalk, veteran of 30 years Farr-Way CLEANERS j _

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MARCH 23. 1937

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in public life, resigned last night 1 from the senate, automatically end- ' lug his post as president pro tern of the upper chamber and chair-, man of the budget committee ■ which drew the $80,000,00 appro--1 prialion bill, largest in the state's 1 history. He was not certain of his duties ' after his appointment, explaining "it is like a director of state insti- ■ tutions which they have in some ■ ' states.” but he did not know if ■ Townsend’s order actually created ; ' such a department in Indiana. ' Gottschalk said he will be bus-, iness manager of all the prisons | and institutions; establish "ceutralized authority;” draft uniform ■ practices; and take charge of goods manufactured in the prisons. He will appoint a psychiatrist to ■ help draw uniform practices in the treatment of mental cases and a director of a division of agricul- .! ture to manage efficiently the farm | ing done at the various institutions, Gottschalk said. Coy, victim of. a sensational at- ■ tack in the statehouse March J i by Pete Cancilla. which brought a legislative investigation and indictment of Cancilla and former Mar- • ion county welfare director Joel , Baker, has served as welfare deI partment director since the der partment was created by the 1933 reorganization act. He had been McNutt’s secretary for penal affairs and later became ' state and regional director of the ’ WPA and member of the gover--1 nor’s unemployment relief comtnis--1 sion. Coy, who is 33, formerly was publisher of the Delphi Citizen. o MUSSOLINI IN ' his ambassador to London. Bino 1 Grandi. was telling the noninter- ■ vention committee that not a single ; Italian volunteer would leave Spain ' until the civil war is over. 1 Several diplomats regarded the ' situation as almost as grave as when the British fleet was concentrated in the Mediterranean in 1935. One report statT”, that if the League of Nations is empowered to , handle the Spanish situation as de- . manded by the loyalist government. ; Italy will immediately denounce the non-intervention accord. o l PORTLAND MAN I i (CONTINUED KKOM PAOK ONH) ■ the U. S. army and upon his dis--1 ; charge, was an inmate of a sold- ! iers’ home in Indiana. ' LEWIS, CHRYSLER r r iCONTINUED fpom tz.np-nK’V' , tion, accepted Murphy's invitation to attend a conference at Lansing I at 11 A. M. tomorrow. Shortly after noon the governor had received no i reply from Walter P. Chrysler, head of the automobile concern, who also t ws invited, but Murphy said h® 1' was “very hdiieful” that the confer- -: ence wou’d be held. i ; Lewis, who technically can be ar--1 j rested if he sets foot in Detroit, •,' wired Murphy from Washington a j that he was being summoned “unj der duress.” “Nevertheless and notwithstanding I agree to be present,” Lewis telegram said Lansing, the state capital, is in “ Ingham county—outside the jurisJ diction of the Wayne county circuit 8 court which ordered the arrest of y ! l,ewte and the 17,000 Chrysler siti down strikers because they ignbr--8 ed an injunction commanding them ■ to leave nine plants. Should Sheriff Thomas Wilcox suddenly decide to enforce the court's order, he could arrest Lewis if the labor leader crosses the boundary of Wayne county during his visit to Michigan. However. Murhpy promised Lewis - ' immunity during his visit to Lans-

ing by saying: “JoJhn L. will have no embarrassment with the law.” ( LARK ASSERTS ■ CONTINUED FROM PA.TK ONK> question ... is, would u conditional increase, as recommended by the president be constitutional or | not? “I think that the answer - • ■ j should lie and must be—that such, an act would plainly be within the | ■ (lowers granted to the courts and . I therefore clearly constitutional." He declared congress had ample ‘ precedent, pointing out that it had frequently changed the number of justices, the last time in 1869 under President Grant, from seven to its . present nine. “It is confidently believed that I few. if any. other important powers i of congress have been so early and , so often expressed with the entire i approval of our country, our presii dents, and our courts, as this of determining the number of judges ! of the supreme court." he said. “This history alone, were there Ino other reason, would warrant the courts, indeed would compel any court to approve as constitutional such exercise of power by congress as the president pro- < poses.” GROUP HONORS ■ CONTINUED FRO». . AGE ONE) 35 cents per couple and 20 cents . sing’e. Tickets may be secured from | any of the mejnbers. Two short playlets were given by the membrs at the close of the meeting. Five Os Family Burned To Death Baldwin, N. Y., Mar. 23.—(U.R>— Five persons died today in a Are which destroyed the residence of William Morse at Baldwin Harbor, Long Island. The victims were Mrs. Rose Morse, 42, wife of William Morse, and their daughters. Rose, 13; Jessie. 11; Helen, 9. and Barbara. 4. Morse, janitor at the Baldwin high school; his daughter, Lillian. 19. and his son, William, Jr., 16. suffered broken bones and other injuries when they leaped from sec-ond-story windows.

I DID YOU KNOW S —that today the Riverside Superservice is undoubtedfl ly operating one of the finest body and fender repair shops in northern Indiana, complete with the latest and most modern equipment. DID YOU KNOW DID YOU KNOW —that the value of your old car — when used as a —that we now have in trade-in on that new auto our body and paint shop — is greatly increased two of the ost skilled I I when your fenders are bumped out, the body workmen in that line - flawlessly smooth and in the city. See them for glossy. We can render an estimate before you that service for you. have your auto repaired. DID YOU KNOW —that the Riverside with the aid of the expert workmen and latest in modern body equipment can make that old car look and act like new—that the Riverside maintains a 24-hour wrecker service—that the Riverside can align those wheels—straighten that frame—in fact, repair any part of your damaged auto. YOU’LL NEVER KNOW —the joy of driving a safe car until you have tried the super service offered by the Riverside. We offer a one-stop service for the motoring public. Drive in today. Riverside Super Service WHEN YOU THINK OF BRAKES—THINK OF ÜB.

JIM BRADDOCK DODGES COURT Heavyweight Fight Situation Becomes Legal Tangle New York, Mar. 23. (U.PJ I Champion Jimmy Braddock was In j i full flight today dodging proeess ! servers as the heavyweight tight situation became a legal battle be | tween Madison Square Garden and Max Sehinellng. and Braddock uud Chicago promoters. Braddock was reported en route here after eluding a deputy sheriff j who twice sought to serve him with a circuit court "show cause'' order yesterday in Miami. The court ordered Braddock to give reasons why an injunction should tu't be granted restraining him from tightjlng Joe lanils in Chicago June 22 —allegedly in breach of his contract with the Garden calling for a title defense against Schmeling I June 3. f Joe Gould, manager of the champion, refused to divulge Jim s whereabouts, but indicated that his fighter was out of reach, at least i temporarily, of the law. If Braddock Is served he must j 'appear before Judge JI. F. Atkin-, son April 5 and explain his preference to fighting la>uis instead of 1 Schmeling. With the champion I avoiding a white man to rtfeet the I Detroit uegrojGould is anxious that i Jim avoid service because of be i lief that a restraining Injunction ' could be obtained more easily In, the deep south. The only possible answer that , Braddock can have is that anti- : Nazi organizations have threatened ■ to boycott a Schmeling title tight j and that he does not believe Such ' a bout would draw a good crowd. ! The Garden, Schmeling and his manager Joe Jacobs, believe t>< has no bearing on the situation and that contracts for the June 3 match in the Long Island bowl are binding. | How this legal maneuver will affect Deutschland Halle's offer to guarantee Braddock $350,000 and the Garden $50,000 to fight Max in Berlin this summer is problemat-: leal. Gould has consistently demanded $400,000 as the champion's part, indicating to Joe Jacobs that the publicized half-million Jim was to get for fighting Louis was a "lot of guff." "One thing is certain, anyhow." Jacobs argued. “Gould don't care anything about contracts. He is j ready to ditch the Chicago fight and suggested we take that $50,000 we are offering the Garden for their promotional rights in Braddock. and turn it over to the champion which would bring the total up to the figure he’s demand , ing.” The most ludicrous figure in the whole picture is promoter Mike Jacobs who holds contracts with both Schmeling and Louis. He holds half interest with the Garden in the Braddock-Schmeling affair, and is also co promoter of the ■ I Braddock-Louis fight. He is forced to share court expenses with the Garden to stop hiS own Louis fight in Chicago. o_ Townsend, Heller To Visit Florida Indianapolis, March 23 —(UP) — Gov. M, Clifford Tow’nsend will leave Sunday morning to attend a , conference of state governors at St. Petersburg, Florida, he announced today. He will be accompanied oly by Mrs. Townsend. Dick Heller, hie patronage secretary and Mrs.

(Heller. Only appointment Towntiend re- ' veuleq today was that of Mns. Martha Saib, his secretary, to replace Mrs Margaret Buchanan lieaddy as secretary nt the state pardons' o-nd parole board. Mrs. Headdy re- ! signed to accompany former Cover

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