Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 280, Decatur, Adams County, 27 November 1937 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Yellow Jackets Defeat Geneva High, 28 .|L

JACKETS SCORE SECOND WIN OF SEASON FRIDAY — Decatur Loses Early Lead But Rallies In Second Half To Triumph Deedtur's Yellow Jackets scored ( their second victory of the season j Friday night, defeating the Geneva Cardinals on the Decatur court, 28 , to 23. It was the first setback of the season for the Cardinals. The Yellow Jackets started slow ly and by putting up a strong de-1 sense. held Geneva scoreless from) the field during the entire first; quarter, which ended with Decaturi out Tn front. 10 to 3. Zerkel, Gaunt, Andrews and Heller each scored i from the field, with McConnell and ( Andrews adding free throws for, Decatur's total. Starting the second half, how- ! ever. Geneva started racing up and down the floor, and with the Yel-j low Jackets attempting to match their game, the Cardinals gradually closed the gap and knotted the count at 14 to 14 shortly before fljte end of the first half Soon after the third period open-; ed. Geneva took the lead for the only time in the game on McKis-| sick's foul toss. The Yellow Jackets regained the lead when Hel- 1 ler connected from the side and Decatur held the margin the rest ( of the game, although never far I ahead. Decatur led at the end of the; third quarter. 23 to 21. Two field goals by Heller were vital in keeping the Yellow Jackets out in front 1 during the final period. Heller was the scoring leader for the Yellow Jackets with four field goals for a total of eight points. Each of the seven Jackets who; broke into the game scored at, least one point. Geneva's scoring was well divid-1 ed. M. Sprunger leading with three i field goals and a foul toss for sev- ’ en points. Decatur FG FT TP i Heller, f 4 0 - Gaunt, f 2 0 4 | Andrews, c 1 2 4 ] McConnell, g 1 3 5 i Zerkel. g „ 2 0 4 Stapleton, f Oil Shoe, f 10 2 Totals 11 6 28 Geneva FG FT TP Agler. f 0 0 0 Grile. f 13 5 McKissick, c 2 2 6 Sprunger. g 3 1 Windmiller, g 10 2 Kelly, f 11 Fenstermaker, g 0 0 0 , Totals 8 7 23 Referee, G. Nulf (Fort Wayne). Umpire, Crowe (Huntington). Preliminary Decatur 34. Geneva 12. o Rail Man Retires at 86 I Rochester. N. H. (U.R) — Frank ( Hoyt. 86. retired recently after 36 years service with the Boston & Maine Railroad — to enjoy life with his two older brothers. Hoyt, still in good health, has a brother i Charles, 88, and a brother Alonzo, ] 90. I SUN. MON. TUES. Now—At Popular Prices! ‘ LOST HORIZON” Ronald Colman. Jane Wyatt, ] John Howard. Edward Everett Horton. Isabel Jewell. ALSO—POPEYE Cartoon Riot. 10c-25c Matinee Sunday until 5 Evenings 10c-30c -0 Last Time Tonight—"lt Happened in Hollywood” Richard Dix, Fay Wray. ALSO —Cartoon, Community Sing, Sportlight & News. 10c • 25c SUN. MON. TUES. 10c Matinee 1:15 Sunday GEORGE O’BRIEN in “WINDJAMMER” & “HIDEAWAY” with Fred Stone. Evenings 10c-20c o—o Last Time Tonight — KEN MAYNARD “Trailing Trouble.” ALSO —“Jungle Menace” 4 “Radio Patrol.” 10c-15c

* Decatur Bowling League Results | >—— . - » STANDINGS Minor League W L Pct. Schmitt 22 11 .667 Mips 22 11 M7 I Kuhn 2(1 13 .606 Cloverleaf It 14 576 : Elks No. 2 17 16 .515 Monroeville 16 17 .4851 Burke 14 It 121 Hoagland 2 31 .060 Merchants League Gamble . 19 5 .7921 i Schafer 18 6 .750 I Van Wert .17 7 .708; Macklin 16 8 .667 , Bank 9 15 .375 1 i Upholster 8 16.333' Monmouth 5 It JM Friedheim 4 M .1 Go ' WEEK'S SCHEDULE Minor League Monday— Schmitt vs Hoagland; ; Cloverleaf vs Mies; Kuhn vs Monroeville; Elks No. 2 vs Burke. Merchants League Tuesday— Macklin vs Monmouth;' i Van Wert vs Gamble; Upholster vs; Bank. Wednesday— Schafer vs Fried-; helm. Major League Thursday Elks No. Ivs Saylors; I Mutschler vs Frickle's. MERCHANT LEAGUE Upholster Murphy 125 128 144; Hoffman 114 lit 113 Brewer . 148 127 177 : Stauffer . 169 142 132 i Newline 100 136 197 Total 656 682 703 Schafers Hobble 125 Rumple 99 146 .. . ' McClure 177 170 i:t3 Schultz 172 130 Walters 151 162 171 Tope 152 153 161' ' Schultb 182 . Total 751 813 720 I Bank Los.- 122 125 Krueckeberg 181 143 152 I Knapke 166 118 ' Blakey . 189 167 lit i Hummer .. 120 166 166 I Hummer 120 166 166' Schamerloh 110 150 1 — Total . 778 704 7311 Fried heim H. Gallmeier 144 149 210 G. Bllitemeler 141 187 160 A. Buuck 128 134 119 P. Neurge 118 132 98 E. Bultemeier 127 172 194 Total 658 774 781 ' Van Wert Owens 153 119 181 Gibson 167 172 145 Rayer 173 174 130 Tindall 126 138 1391 Fleming 183 138 139 Total 802 747 772 Macklin Keller 174 161 146' Hunt 150 .. . . 94l J. Strickler 154 146 1371 Mac klin 171 158 146 i G. Strickler 178 166 179 j Gilliom 139 ...... I Total 827 770 7021 Gamble Peterson . 153 100 162 Gerber ... 151 154 127 R. Woodhall 142 188 146 Lyons 148 148 „...[ K. Woodhall 128 170 179 B. Woodhall ... 152 Total 722 760 766 Monmouth Fuelling HO 139 122 B- Gerke 105 140 141 Berger 150 128 128 E- Gerke 119 133 ng Hobrock 158 122 129 Total 642 662 638 MATCH GAME Immanuel 2nds A. Steele 150 165 147 L. Steele 126 113 E. Thieme 94 .... . 135 G. Thieme 94 171 H. Thieme 92 V. Bleeke 130 163 139 A. Bischoff 124 101 Totals 594 657 693 Convoy Country N. Etler 141 161 149 Erw. Etzler 123 .... 136 A. Etzler 125 C. Etzler 170 155 203 W. Etzler 148 117 E. Etzler 136 136 G. Etzler 120 Gl. Etzler 146 Totals . 707 689 770 DANCE SUNDAY NIGHT Glenmore Tavern Glen more, Ohio 7 Piece Band (7:30 Central time)

MATCH JARRELLI TO FIGHT BUBP — Pee Wee .Jarrell To Fight Portland Boxer Next Thursday ' Fort Wayne, Ind. Nov. 27 [ Champion meets champion in the 10-round headline boxing match at I the Shrine theater on Thursday , I night Dec. 2. with Pee Wee Janutll. Indiana's welterweight title holder, ; facing the heavy guns of Wendall I , Bubp of Portland, middleweight . ; champ of Hoosierland. This terms 1 ' more than an average fight. Bubp . i through his managers. Jack Dentp--1 sey, former heavyweight champion i j of the world and Archie Hindman. 1 j has agreed to fight for nothing if , 1 he fails to knock Pee Wee out. I In Bubp's last bouts in this city | | he shelled three men insensible, 1 I climaxing with a four rounder of • ' leather poisoning to the Senegalese ' • Slasher. Norman Tierre. in a chain- I 1 pioiuhip fight at the Speedway the | 1 past summer. He has knocked out | 16 other fighting men on the pro ! ranks. Jarrell has never lost a fight in ! I Fort Wayne and says that Bubp j will not only fail to knock him out but that Wendall is jji for the lac- I Ing of his young lite. . Other encounters are: 1 Tiger Kid Carsonia, Indianapol-1 is. Indiana's No. 1 welterweight 1 championship contender vs Frankie ! Kolborn of Waterloo, lowa. Koi-j ' born is welter champ of his state. | Peter LaCrosse. Cherokee Indian ; .lightheavy, mixes with Johnny Den-1 I nison of Indianapolis. Dennison> held the Golden Glove champion-1 ship of three divisions at Indianapolis before turning pro. Sam Dixie localite. meets Johnny McCoy of Indianapolis. One or two more con- [ tests will be added. First contest I begins at 8:30 p. m. NATHAN MANN BEATS PASTOR! — I Bob Pastor’s Hopes For Championship Blasted In Defeat — ' New York. Nov. 27— (UP)— Na- | than Mann. bull-shouldered New Haven heavyweight, last night squelched Boh Pastor's demand for ! championship competition by winn- [ ing an easy lOrround decision over the darkhaired New Yorker who 'asted the distance with Joe Louis in January. Seven thousand fans in Madison , Square Garden saw the hard-hitting ] sandy haired Connecticut fighter 1 take the unanimous decision after la slow, uninteresting fight in which ' Mann had Pastor on the floor for no count in the opening round. Mann, who had been picked by ] ! Promoter Mike Jacobs as the young I ] heavy weight meet likely to stop ] Pastor's shouting about a title fight [with Louis, tried to make a fight of it, 'but after the fourth round Pastor's back-pedalling slowed the mi’ling down to a walk. Promoter Jacobs was desirous of a Pastor defeat because the former I N. Y. U. halfback is managed by I 1 James J. Johnston. Jr., son of the former Madison Square Garden promoter. whom Jacobs succeeded. After the opening knockdown it seemed that Mann was sure to win I by a knockout and succeed where : Louis failed, but his owm awkwardness in the fourth, fifth and sixth sessions prevented an abbreviated ending. Nathan was unable to follow up when some of his crushing hooks had Pastor semi-groggy. AFL PROPOSES (CONT INTTED FROM PA.QW DyWI 1 off" The analaysis categorized consumer buying power in three 1 groups which it estimated would have the following values for 1937: . (1) wages and salaries. $47,000,j 000.000; (2) investors' income. $11,000,000,000: (3) profits of busi- > nessmen and farmers. $12,Q00,000.- ; 000. o I 'Auburn 32. Bluffton 23, Butler 22, Garrett 16. 5 Hartford City 35, Brookville 34. Kendallville 26, Nappanee .23, 5 Marion 31, Wabash 17. Warren 28, Dunkirk 23. ) Shelbyville 29, Greencastle 26. • Bedford 18, Martinsville 17. Muncie 21. New Castle 17. Jeff (Lafayette) 31, Connersville 24. Jasper 26. Vincennes 26 (overtime) •— O — " — 1 " America Is Concerned Over Japanese Seizure Washington. Nov. 27. —<U.R>—Sec-j retary of State Cordell Hull said I today the United States had made '' representation to Japan respecting l 1 American concerns over possible]

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1937

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interferences with the Chinese citshorns. | American concern was expressed i {specifically over any changes which; I might interfere with the present system of collecting and distribut- ! ing the customs revenue —pledges 1 lin large part to payments on 1 | China's foreign debt obligations. . 1 o CIRCUIT COURT — ■■•PMTtXt’Kri Decatur vs Charles E. Magley, Es- ' ther O. Hui'.ton and Wayne , I Burger, note and to set aside fraud- , . ulent conveyance. Jan. 10 — Vincent Westfall vs | Richard Fleischman and Dorothy ( I Fleischman, damages. ~ o Peg Leg Into Reverse ' Dallas (U.R' D. E. Hedgecock, of ! Dallas, was taken to an emergency I hospital after his car hit a tele-1 phone pole, and Dr. Gus SchrieI berg was startled to see his leg turned around, the toes facing | backward But Hedgecock wasn't I worried, it was his wooden leg i c . . . . Lost Keys Embarrassing Youngstown. O. (U.R) Edward Keely. of New Castle, Pa., who left his keys in “another coat." spent I several hours in jail here because ' mechanics he called to cross the ignition on his automobile phoned 1 I police and he could not produce 1 i his registration card. ' o [ i Turkey Pool Considered Mangum. Okla. (U.R) Farmers in southwest Oklahoma have been invited to join a turkey pool to dispose of their birds at the best possible price. The co-operative plan has been used in other Oklahoma towns, including Guthrie and : Sayre.

Youth Wins Race With Death '"'J ' mE | j||gv< Atx ■.. M - JS* k\ | AFTER | f gP \ VvwclL*- /^ -X>MC,V W ** x : 'U **% w f ' e I fl| ' f J iflh \ > ’ **•* X; ... V;,.. /■ '■■ 1 X # jjMjk S ... ■■<"•■ G \ '■* ', ! . </ t [ James Helmer| ___________— Stricken with infantile paralysis while at work at Stevens Point, Wis., James Helmer. 23, undergraduate football manager at Marj quette university, was rushed by special train to Chicago where he arrived just in time to have his life saved by the "iron lung” which ■ artificially stimulated his respiration. The above graphic pictures ; show Helmer, top. just before he was put in the “iron lung”, his . face contorted with pain, and. below, his revived expression as he gained a new lease on life.

NOTED CIRCUS (CUNTINUKt. (■ P.O* rAOK OWB) was how Fellows might begin ajtersonal recommendation of the current circus. "Bigger an dbetter beyond belief. Better Broncho Busters better bounding Bayaderes, better Billed*. bigger bands blaring, best since Barnum, believe Bozo!” Ipedß riekt fftr cM Br Fellows married Signe Eugene von Breitholtz in in April 1913. As his career neared an end. he liked to thin'., of the circus as a "Sunday School Show" with an appeal for men. women and children in al! walks of life. “There’s no gypping, no confidence games, no short changing, and you see in the tent just what the advertisements promise,” he said. ■— o Orchids to a Botanist Durham. N. C. (U.R) —Orchids to North Carolina! Donovan S. Correll. fellow in botany at Duke University, had identified 53 species and five varieties of orchids growing in every part of the state, lie has recorded some of them for the first time. o "Junk Bones" Shipped East El Paso. Tex. (U.R)- Two million pounds of "junk bones” -skeletons of cattle from the drouth-stricken areas of Mexico have been shipped through El Paso since Jan. 1 to eastern markets where the product is used for fertilizer and chemicals. o Housewarming Is Fiery Florence, Colo. (U.R) — Mr. and Mrs. Ed Campion received a fiery housewarming A few days after they moved into a new residence here, mice got Into the matches in a cupboard and started a fire while they were asleep unstairs.

WILLSHIRE NEWS Mrs. Frank Cox 4>f Monongahela, Pa., was u guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. A Cox. She stopped for a few days visit on her way home from visiting relatives In Willlanis. Arizona. and California. She returned to her home Wednesday nqon. Dr. J. A. Maxwell spent Thanksgiving with hi* parents In Upper Sandusky. Mrs. Herman Myers and s'-n Geno and Mrs Harriet Colter. Mr. ami Ms. L. E. Brandt and children of Wapakoneta, were entertained In the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Lowman and sons Thanksgiving Day. at a turkey dinner. Mr..and Mre. George Buckley and son Richard were guests Thanksgiving Day of Mr. and Mr.-. J. <T. Hilderback. Mr. und Mrs, John Myers were guests of Mr. and Mrs. FreJ Jewell and son Bob. Thanksgiving Day. Mrs. Charity Brown and Mrs. Irvin Samples jiave been brought to [their homes from the Decatur hoetpiI tai. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Weakley, [newly weds, will make the! • home iin Willshire. They have rooms in I the home of Mrs. Agnes Hill. Mrs. Harriet Colter entertained lat dinner Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. L. IE.IE. Brandt and chl'dren of Wa.pa- ’ koneta, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Myers i and son Gene and Dr. Joseph MuxI well. The W. H. M. S. was entertained ' in the home of Mrs. Dale Cowan

Golf Stars Open Winter Round of Tournr?-tj ■ s'WHnT" " " i TF r * — ' j View of Miami Biltmore w. R “ S w J 4 -UffSw • T1 9K • Wn.■ 1® ; w > F jßy ■" gg w i (/ ■. ~ gUt jjßß|faJß|KM|®< ilnp

Golf stars of the nation are beginning their round 1 of the winter golf tourneys during which more than $35,000 prize money will be won. Beginning event on the southern circuit is the rich SIO,OOO Miami Biltmore Open which is followed by the $3,500 Nas- ; sau Open.’ The winter schedule extends from Dec.

Middies and Cadets Ready for Annual rrav Lj a/m>n*w ~JSkI tw, . jjßMu '< JOBf S\ . -y 4 gI A 1 Jk|| * liWk ** ’ JKp K ■“"to As J 4 S/jS Or r HFVtr ✓—» wF/a h a ofe I A I F J It Dl '^» ,s dt *W 'jfclß p- jjSBS | «| gpi, . i| Hhb^i^* *l.H| M w,b# ' I I IXGRAM W\. **’*y A'” K MNtt XHH "2 M Y HB "W y * The Navy and Army football teams are both pointing toward Philadelphia with p u Bo> B ' I ing their traditional rival. The Middies expect great feats from Ingram, .. f i uev ” Long for flaS I 1 guard and Powell, powerful end. Army is depending on Woodrow W ilson an field work behind Mather at tackle.

last Thursday. Mr. and Mr*. F. A. Detter entertained at dinner for their children and grand children Thanksgiving Day. Rev. and Mrs. S. A. Bruner and children spent Thanksgiving in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Beau, pear Eprlngfield. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Spitler entertained their children and grandchildren at a turkey dinner Thanks giving Day. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Reynolds spent Sunday in the home of a. J. Reynolds in Vera Cruz. Mrs. Jesse Spitler, Mrs. \V. E Spitler. Mrs. Jarome Morrison and Mre. Hugh Reynolds were Fort Wayne shoppers Monday af'< rnoon. Wayn Ayres of Ada is spending a few days with liis grandmother, Mrs. Agnes Hill. Mrs. Paul Stove of Chicago is a guest of her parents. Mr. and Mis Janies Riley, south of town. Indiana Man Is Given Sentence For Forgery Rochester. Ind.. Nov. 27.—(U.R) Henry Habada. 33, Edwardsville. HL. today was under sentence of two to 14 years in the Indiana state prison at Michigan City for forgery.liabgda, employed on a farm near here, was arrestei Nov. 13 for passing worthless checks When arraigned before Judge Robert Miller he stated he was drunk at the time afid offered to make ' the checks good. Judge Miller turned the ease over to Prosecute

* 1 to about the middle of March and includes n> I • than a dozen important golf events. leading contenders for these rich prizes is Guldahl, National Open champion, and Shute, former P. G A. UUe holder, in their fighting.

lk|D\ nF * "k. Okla SB** 1 . Ps *n/r t.inr ■; IIT* Lt Komn' Ln 'J® 1 ® half of the Saskatchw BaiM 1 ’ (l meat • k ita Fish Tie UpTrjf V I,' b Jiuntr, * ]£ow Kt illn< ' ' r ' '"c-ftKlr ' ! :, " uh : 1 'le W * > Hopper Campa.gn N1 llalhart. Te« (IJ.Pj \, ri .BumA ' au<l adja«' Kd ,bl ■ north- astern New m. !( , Ben the ■ ""‘Ha r'jmpaa.. **' Bl lAt'