Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 75, Decatur, Adams County, 29 March 1937 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

ANDERSON FIVE CAPTURES STATE TOURNEY TITLE Wins State Tourney; Central Eliminated In First Game Anderson. Ind . Mar. 29 (U.R) t'aiuch Archie Chadd's Anderson | Indians today were acclaimed by home-town fans and the entire state as Indiana's 1937 high school basketball champion after decisive victories in the finals of the state tournament. The rangy, defensively outstanding Anderson quintet invaded Butler University fieldhouse at peak strength to override a smaller Rochester teain. 28 to 16. and then defeated Huntingburg, the "peoples choice." 33 to 23 in the championship engagement. Upon returning home from Indianapolis. the victorious Indians were greeted by a hilariously happy population of some 39.000 persons who had turned out almost en masse to celebrate Anderson’s second title in three years. City officials were prepared, however, to avert any such demon-1 st rat ion as in 1935 when excited I fans rolled cannon balls from the l courthouse yard through the I streete. and had arranged for the | celebration to be held at the high school gym. The Easter parade became virtually a victory parade for the Indians Thousands soon packed the gymnasium and peals of praise showered forth upon the members of the team and Coach Chadd. their faces wreathed in broad smiles. Fans heaped credit upon Chadd I for the manner in which he direct- I EQQESJ Tonight & Tuesday One Long Loud Laugh! “THAT GIRL FROM PARIS” Jack Oakie. Gene Raymond. ! Lily Pons. Herman Bing. ALSO—DONALD DUCK & Mickey Mouse, "Magician Mickey” 10c-25c o—o Wed. 4 Thurs.— Helen Broderick. Victor Moore, "We're on the Jury” First Show Wed. at 6:30. O—O Coming Sunday — William Powell, Joan Crawford. Robert Montgomery, Frank Morgan, “The Last of Mrs. Cheyney.” Tonight & Tuesday Two Action Thrillers! John Wayne. Jean Roners in Jack London's “CONFLICT” & “WOMAN IN DISTRESS” May Robson, Irene Hervey. Only 10c.20c o—o Friday 4 Sat.—BUCK JONES and John Wayne in “RANGE FEUD.” O—O ' Comino Sunday — 2 More Hits! “RACING LADY" Ann Dvorak, Harry Carey; 4 James Dunn in “Mysterious Crossing." | CORTI Tonight & Tuesday Dick Powell, Madaliene Carroll, Alice Fave “ON THE AVENUE” Ritz Bros.. Stepin Fetchit Plus-Comedy, News. 10-25 c WED. • THUR. Warner Baxter 'WHITE HUNTER' June Lang, Gail Patrick, Alison Skipworth. FRIDAY “TAKA CHANCE NITE” -10 c Matinee Friday starting at 1:30 • 4 Coming— Jane Withers “HOLY TERROR" Anthony Martin • Leah Ray El Brendel.

aggregation during the season's [ ; campaign Chadd came to Anderton in the 1 I fall of 1933. Next year his team Huccumber to a grout Technical , tlndiunapoliz) club in regional competition. In 1935. Anderton defeated a previously unbeaten Jeffersonville team fur the state championship Last year Chadd again brought his team to the finals i where the Indians fell before Fiankfort, subsequent champions i The "Little Napoleon.” as the fans hail Chadd, starred at Butler University as a player, helped I Coach Tony Hinkle direct the 1929 Buller national championship ' squad, and couched four years at | Canton. 11l where his teams reach- : ed the semi tinals of the Illinois ' state tourney in 1932 and the finals , in 1933. The Indiana tinned in a record of 21 victories and six defeats this season and entered the state tour- I nament without much recognition Throughout sectional. regional, and semi-final play Anderson dem- 1 onstrated its rugged defense, 1 speed and power The Indians, as it is now tippar- 1 ent. eatne to the final round at - peak strength. Two of the other 1 competitors Central (Fort Wayne i and Rochester appaared to lack I the spark which had carried them * through the preliminary stages and i were unable to maintain the pace 1 1 Huntingburg's Happy Hunters; i alone approached Anderson's drive | and power. Coach Ray Scott's quintet demonstrated its ability with a hard-fought 3()-to-28 victory: 1 . over Central, ranked as the out-1 1 standing favorite prior to the tourI ney. ; 1 The terrific afternoon contest 1 presumably placed to great a ' strain on the Hunters for they 1 were unable to match Anderson's smooth precision performance in the titular game. The Indians, haring defeated Rochester with little . apparent effort, entered the final 1 tilt in perfect condition. Robert Menke. Huntingburg cen-1 ; ter. gained highest individual honors of the state tournament when I | he was awarded the Gitnbe) award i I tor sportsmanship Overjoyed at winning the award. Menke displayed unusual modesty proclaiming to a host of admirers "But if you think I'm a basketball player, you ought to see my : brother” He referred to an older; brother, now attending a military academy, with whom he plans to enter college next year. Pon Blemker, a teammate of Menke, won high scoring honors in the finals, when he tallied IS , points in the two games which the Hunters played. o— | , Welfare Application Dates Are Announced ——. Indianapolis. Ind.. March 29 — < UP l Application* for Ute position of county welfare director will be received until April 19. the bureau of personnel of the state department of public welfare announced today. Date and place of written and oral examinations which will be required of applicants will be set I later. Salary for the position ranges' from 31.000 to 31.300 a year for counties of less than 15.000 population to 34.000 to $4,200 a year for , counties of more than 200,000 (population. 0 Warsaw Man Is Given Suspended Sentence Warsaw, Ind., Mar. 29.— (U.R> — William Jones, 36, of Etna Green, was given a suspended sentence of one to 10 years when he pleaded guilty to criminally assaulting two minor girls. He was the eighth of | 12 persons arrested during an anti-1 vice campaign to admit charges filed against him. Seven have been sent to state prisons. Ernest Nlchola-s and Victor Hoo- ( ver. who were als oheld on assault I charges, pleaded not guilty. Bonds were set at 3LOOO. Free this week only— Your spark plugs cleaned and tested Free! (gulf) 1 I Registered Lubrication ' the most exacting in town. Runyon GULF . Service Monroe at Fourth. B | I

WELTERWEIGHTS BATTLE FRIDAY Nick Nicholson To Battle Mexican Champ At Fort Wayne Fori Wayne, Mur. 29 -Nick Nicholson of Shelbyville is matched with Cecilia Lozada, official welterweight champion of Mexico in the final of the Armory boxing card here next Friday night, April 2. They are routed for 10 rounds at 150 pounds. Nicholson is Indiana's leading welter and middleweight championship contender. He fought King Wyatt and Charlie Light here on past programs. He’s a great little tighter an dall who see him go will ugree Lozada, the "Plumed Eagle of Mexico" will have a very serious evening ill the pit with the | "Gringo." Heavyweights rule in the semiwindup spots. In one match Don King of Indianapolis, a colored streak of lightning, collides with .Rush Heise, white heavyweight i from Columbus. (>. Heise has a great record. He fought Lee Sav--1 old! at the stadium in Chicago last year Jimmy Carter of Detroit and Wood Blackburn of Terre Haute are caged up in the other fight. , Both engagements are for eight I rounds. Probable weights are: King. 185 pounds and Heise, 177. i Carter is expected to weigh about 195 to 205 for Blackburn. Bob Smith of Defiance makes his third fight here meeting the tigerish Norman Tierrs of Indianapolis in a six rounder. Smith stopped his man last time in Fort Wayne and gave King Wyatt a great fight the first time in. Tlerre scored a kayo over Johnny McCoy of Terre Haute on the last pro show in this city. A fosr round curtain raiser is being arranged. Beeman Howard. 1937 Golden Glove welter champ of Fort Wayne will box one of Indianapolis' former Golden (Bove stars. First match begins at 8:30 p. m. All ringside and reserved seats are I now on sale at Riegel's, the Berry case, Pete Anderson's filling station an dat Tommy Shevlin's cigar stand at the Old First National Bank building. There will be no 1 advance in price. o « * ; Today’s Sport Parade (By Hsnry McLemore) ♦ —— ♦ New York. Mar. 29. - <U.R> —Today is the day that Madison Square Garden is going to whereas, to wit, and or, tort, and litigate James J. Braddock. Because the heavyweight boxing I champion of the universe lias let it bo known that sharply at 10 a. m., 11 a. m.. 12 noon. 1 p. m., or later on. he will allow his august person to be served with a writ by minions of the federal government. The writ is the brain child of Madison Square Garden's child brain, and its purpose is to bring Braddock before a judge and make him show cause why he should not defend his title against Max Schmeling in the Garden bowl on June 3. » i For nearly a month the Garden has been attempting to place the fatal paper in the battle-scared hands of the champion. But Jim, displaying footwork that not even bis trainer thought he possessed, has kept one jump ahead of his tormentors. The chase ranged I from Florida to Chicago, and finI ally reached a madcap finale on i Saturday when the Garden's posse, I certain they had Braddock corner- : ed, swooped down on his home in Woodcliff. N. J., and triumphantly serve dthe paper on a dock-hand who bore a close resemblance to the harassed gladiator. For several hours after the serving of this paper on the dock-hand, one Gunboat Williams, confusion reigned. It reigned first in the office of Colonel John Kilpatrick, j Garden president, when that sterling old Yale blue, with the smugj ness of a cat who has not only swallowed one canary, but an entire aviary, thumped his chest and 1 roared: “Braddock has been served." It next reigned in the office of Joe Gould. Braddock's manager, when that master strategist was told of Colonel Kilpatrick’s announcement. "The colonel is nuts, and nuts is spades.” Gould said. "Braddock has been right here all day. Haven't you, Jim?" Jim, who was right there, said he had and that someone should give the colonel back to the Indians. "Lay off the Indians,” a boxing writer with a touch of Cherokee in his veins said. “They've been persecute denough." Confusion then reigned over half of New Jersey as everyone involved in the writ serving matter told different stories. Some told diffrent stories two and three times. As it turned out. Braddock bad not been served, but will today. It Is natural to assume that his dei cision to accept the paper came I when he decided he had thought iup an answer for the judge when

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1937.

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■ the Judge asked him to show cause' why she shouldn't meet Schmeling; . in June. Yet. it is almost unbelievable that Braddock, even though he| isn't an Abbe Dimet when it comes, to thinking, should require a, : month to hit upon the proper ans-| 1 wer so rthe judge. Because the; answer is as obvious as a sabretoothe hen. It is: "Judge, who in the hell wants to see it?" That might get Braddock held; in contempt of court, hut it would; be the proper answer. A Braddock-; Schmeling tight wouldn't draw hair-; . cut money in this town, and even . if it would prizefighters aren't in i the business for haircuts, and • shouldn't be expected to fight for I them. Still, a contract being al contract, the Garden is likely to awake one morning and find that; it has that fight, lock, stock, and barrel. And when thal morning comes 1 want the aspirin concess-; ion in the executive offices. It'll I be worth a mint of money. i (Copyright 1937 by UP.) o i At the Training Camps j By United Press » « Yankees i St. Petersburg. Fla.. March 29— (U.Rz—Owner Jacob Ruppert of the New York Yankees said today that under no circumstances would he , concede a point or ask his “20-game pitcher" Red Ruffing to report to training camp. "I am going back . to New York Thursday and do not expect to suggest settlement to . Ruffing before or after 1 leave," he said. The Yanks rested today after . defeating the Boston Bees, 6 to 5. I yesterday to sweep their seven- , game exhibition series. Dodgers Sebring. Fla. — The Brooklyn 1 . Dodgers, who have wen their last t five games, come here today to play the International League ( Newark Bears. The Dodgers yes- ; terday turned back the Cincinnati [ Reds, 4-2. Senators ’ Orlando. Fla.—The Washington ; Senators play the Montreal Royals ’. of the International league here to-' I dty after their winning streak was stopped at eight straight yesterday ( by the Boston Red Sox in as weird a game as seen in the ' grapefruit league this year. the ( Senators came from behind to r score nine runs in the last two I Innings and knot the count, only | } | to lose as the Sox scored the winning tally on a wild throw. Giants Vicksburg. Miss. — After getting their first peek at Bob Feller's fireball, the New York Giants decided today they already had seen too much of it. The youthful Cleveland pitcher whiffed six of the , National league champion batsmen ; in three innings as the Indians ' I won. 42. to even their series at ; two games each. Thus in seven | innings of grapefruit play Feller ' , has fanned 12, has not allowed a run. and been found for only one I ' hit. Cardinals Daytona Beach. Fla—ln typical gashouse fashion the St. Louis Cardinals snapped a six-game los- ‘ ing streak by nosing out the De3 WAYS TO GET MONEY CONFIDENTIAL DEALINGS 1. PHONE our offlee. tell us of your money fleeds. 2. CUT this &d out—write your name and addrww on it—and mail to us 3. CALL at office —conveniently located. » Private consultation rooms. You can use any of these three ways and you are under NO OBLIGATION if you . do not accept nor service. i You can easily arrange a loan ON YOCR j SIGNATURE, furniture, auto or other personal property Also Auto and Merchandise Financing with or wiinout down paymazi. LOCAL LOAN COMPANY Inoorporated ' 105% North Second Street Over Schafer Store Phone 2-3*7 Decatur, Indiana 1

11 roil Tigers. 6 to 5. yesterday. ; Dizzy Dean, milking Ills first ap | pearanee on llie Card mound, neaf Ily came to Idows with Umpire j Ormsby when the official refused I to rule a third strike on one bats- ' man. Diz worked only three in- ■ nings, but gave up- two runs on ' consecutive singles by Greenberg, Tebbets and Rowe. Held to one | ; hit the day before, the gashouse 'gang collected 14 yesterday as I Terry Moore set the pace with I four. Pirates Ontario. Cal. - Pittsburgh's Pirates dropped an exhibition game ■to the coast league la>s Angeles team. 9-7, before 3.000 spectators 1 yesterday. White Sox I Los Angeles — The record was I two straight victories for the Chi- | cago White Sox over the Cubs today In their 11-gaine exhibition i series. The Sox held the Cubs to 1 I three scratch hits for a 6-2 victory yesterday. Vernon Kennedy and ; I John Rigney held the Cubs hitless i | tor six Innings and Whitehead al- ' lowed only three. Monmouth Juniors To Present Plan Tuesday 1 A three act play. “Dotty and Daffy." wfl! be presented by the junior class of the Monmouth high school! Tuteday night, at 8 o'clock in the: high school gymnasium. Admission prices will be 15 cents for children and 25 cents for adults. The public is cordially invited to attend.

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THREE PERSONS i A RE MURDERED Beauty Model, Mother < And Roomer Are Found Slain I New York. Mar. 29—(UP)—Df , tectives searched today for a isJay- i er who chose Easter morning to ’ heat and strangle a professional j model and her mother anti fatally | stub a man roomer in their apart ment in the fashionable Beekman I lilll section of .Manhattan. The naked body of 20-year-old Veronica Gedeon was found sprawl ed across her bed. Her throat bore the marks of the killer’s lingers. Beneath the bed lay her at- ’ tractive middle aged mother, Mrs. Mary Gedeon, 54. She, too, had I 1 been choked. In his adjoining bedroom lay Frank Byrnes. 35. a waiter and bartender who bad been employed at the exclusive Racquet and Ten- ! nis club. Attired only in underwear, hts body was stretched on the floor. He had been stabbed half a dozen times on the left side of his face and head. The police believed that the killer had waited for his victims, killing them as they went to their rooms. A preliminary medical exainln-. ation showed that Mrs. Gedeon, who was said by neighbors to have appeared youthful and attractive, apparently had been criminally assaulted. but the daughter apparently had not. The slayings were discovered at. 3:10 p. in. yesterday when Joseph' Gedeon, estranged husband of Mrs. Gedeon, and another daughter, Mrs. Ethel Kudner, and her husband. Joseph Kudner, arrived for Easter dinner. Although they had not been living together 1u recent years, Gedeon's relations with his wife were amicable. Finding the door of the apartment open, the dinner guests walked in through the foyer, dining room and living room. Then they discovered the three bodies. A ; Pekinese dog which was in the habit of barking furiously at strangers was cowering in a corner [of the living room. When detectives arrived, the dog began barking and kept on for several hours until it was sent to the society for the prevention of cruelty to animals Neighbors said they could not recall having heard it during the early morning hours when the police believed the slayings occurred. A fur coat and pocketbook belonging to Miss Gedeon, who was known among the artists and mu- ; sicians on Beekman Hill as Ron- | nie, were found in a hamper in the bathroom. Her dress was found, torn, on the floor of the living room. Her single undergar-] ment, ripped and torn, was on the

floor of the bedroom. The police believed that Mrs Gedeon was killed first, while alone. In the apartment. Byrnes then came home, they reasoned, and went to his room and undresesd He was surprised and slain. Miss Gedeqn returned from a date about 3 a. m. with an escort.' Stephen Butter. They parted at l the door. The beautiful mode), whose photographs have appeared in many national magazines, step ped Inside and was seized by the throat, the police believed. She was dragged into the bedroom, her clothes were ripped off and her lifeless body was thrown upon the bed. - ■ — O 1 Torch Murder ('lues Reported Exhausted New Castle. Ind March 28- (UP) —All clues in connection with the torch death of comely .Mabie Sutton, 28, former Cadez school teacher, have been exhausted. Henry* counto authorities admitted today. Theories of murder and suield'y were Investigated after M!<m Suttons charred body was found on a

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