The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 47, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 March 1932 — Page 8
THURSDAY. MARCH 17, 1932
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I JUNIORS WIN (Continued from First Page) three fouls called on him. Juniors-Freshmen. In the game Juniors vs Freshmen, Jenson scored a free throw for the | Freshies on a personal called on Tod i Richhart. Fisher shot a basket for ' the Juniors followed by one by Dick I Miller. Voyle Osborn scored his free | throw' chance for the Freshmen on , a foul called on Fisher. Dick Miller 'shot two fiee throws on a foul called lon Kern. Fisher, made a basket, for | the Junior lead of 8 to 2 at the end [of the first quarter. | The’ second quarter started with Maxwell Culler scoring a basket for 1 the Freshies. Fisher put one in for I the Juniors', Osborn, Junior, scored |a free throw chance; Joe Kindig shot | a basket giving the Juniors a 12 to 5 lead at the half. Kindig shot- another as- the third quarter started. fllowed by one by Fisher. Voyle Osborn scoredXa long shot for the Freshies; Green put a free throw through on a foul called , <>n Osborn: Beck shot a basket giving the Jdniors a 19 to 7 lead the end <>f the third quarter,, ~ The 1 • • < n didn’t score the bst period, and the Juniors increased i their lead to the final 29 to 7 scAre. I with Beck shooting four baskets and ! Osborn one duriiig this final) period. For. the Juniors, Fisher,/right for-' f-ward. shot four field-gaalsLhad two . . ~ .. d on’ hin < n > left (forward shot one field gokl; Freeman | center, failed to_ score as did Rich- | hart, right guard. Miller,-, left guard I shot a basket and two free throws; | Kindig made good two field goals. Green failed to ■ score a field goal but shot a free throw and Be -. y shot four field goals. They made good 3. out of 3 chances at free throws. Kerr, right forward for the Freshl men -had a foul called on him; Jenen, left forward shot a free throw; Cullet, Center shot one field goal; ; Osborn, right guard shot one basket I and two free throws and had ore | foul called, on him: guard failed to score |s did Cearfoss. Thon - burg, KiUon, Gawthrop and Tribble. The Freshmen made good their three chances at free throws. Final Game Exciting. The final game declared by spectators id"be as .exciting as any played on the floor the past season, was cl-«>e one front start to finish,. On he Juni r-teara were players who formed Syracuse’s first team at the Start of the .season: ■ - • .. Paul Bushong started scoring by making a basket for the Seniors. renaon missed a flee throw chance on a foul Lung but recovered th • i ill to score i' » basket, giving tfie .a tv point leald. Beck tied the score I all with a I basket; Lung failed to score a free throw oh a foul called on Bushong, Gerdy scored a free • throw from a fouj c il.cd on D. k Miller The Seniois led 5 to 4 at end 'of the tiist quarter- --s. Marion Culler shot a basket Dv ■ the Seniois followed by one Millet
shot. Miller followed this with another long one, giving the Juniors the lead 8 to 7. Miller shot another, Osborn scored one and the Juniors lead 12 to 7. Swenson failed to score a free throw on a foul called on Richhart. Osborn made a basket for the Juniors, and Bushong shot one for the Seniors, Beck missed two free throw 1 chances. Bushong made a basket but | missed a free threw chance as he was fouled on scoring the basket. Osborn shot another for the Juniors ' who lead 16 to 11 at the end of the I half. , , M. Richhart failed to score a free throw chance or| a foul called on Beck, at the start of the last half. ( Bushong put in a basket for the I Seniors and Swenson scored a free > throw chance oh a foul called on" Miller. Beck failed to score his free throw chance on a foul called on j Bushong; Gordy missed two I throw chances <>n a foul called on I Beck. Merrith Richhart shot a baski et to tie the score 16 all. Lung was i sent in for Fishjer as the third quar- ; ter ended. [ i Lung missed a free throw chance, j Richhart missed two free throw I chances on a foul called on Miller; ; Bushong made a basket for the Seniors but it was I not counted, and he failed t-Anake free throw chances ; s he had been fouled when Scoring. Bill Osborn ■ missed his free throw chance <|n a foul called on I Culler. Bushong scored a free throw I giving the Seniors the lead 17 to 16. i Osborn tied it (with his free throw chance. Slone was sent in for Miller. Osborn missed a free tljrow chance but Swenson shot one called on Osborn. Miller was sent in for Osbmn j with the score. 18 to 17 for the SenI tors. Lung shot a basket for the 19 to J 8 wih for the Juniors. Beck failed ■to score a free throw on a foul •ailed on M. Richhart as the game I ended. Two Seniors were high scorers i for the evenings play, Bushing making 12 points jand Swenson 10 points, j In the game against the Juniors the Seniors scored four out of J 2 free throw chances. The Juniors i scored- one out of 8 chances I Gordy, Senior, shot one free throw lin the game; i Bushong shot four | field goals, oipg free throw and had I two fojls called on him; Swenson shot a field two free, throws •nd h;.|l two; fouls called on him; - Richhart shoj a basket and had j three fouls called oh him; Culler shot a basket and fouled twice; Henwood - For the Juniors Osborn shot three baskets and a free throw; Beck shot two baskets and had one foul called on him; Lupg shot a basket and fouled once; Miller shot three baski els and foulqd three times; Richhart, ’ Fisher and S|tone failed to score. The periods between play during i the evening were lively with yheers, ■ serpentine dances and noise made by .he classes attempting to out yell Ijeach other. L . ' At the enn of the final game the ch impionship tin , cup was presented to Olia Clyde Butt, president-of the Junior class] SOUTH SHORE I Mr. and Mrs) Dwight Mock enterI tained friends from South Bend over the week eiid. \ Mis. Dwight Mock and Mrs. Berf ; Searfoss cabled on .Mrs. Lester Mock. ..ml family ) Friday afternbon. Mis. Jordlon and Mis. Snepp called <>n Elza Law, Sunday, i • Miss Margaret Mock spent Thuisday night with Willodean Mock. Mr. and iMrs. Ingall and daughter, Mis. Irene Brown and son Richard, MT and Mrs. Bert Searfoss, Mr. and I Mrs. Roy Niles and son Burton spent I Thursday evening with Mr. and Mrs. I Dwight Mqck, ' Mrs, Charles Harris -and children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. i land Baker. Mr. and Mis. Roy Niles spent Sun- ■ day evening with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. ! Gilbert anjd family. —4 r THREE MEN INJURED. W. X- Rice is suffering with an I infecteyp leg. the infection resulting from a lyruise received while at work at Wilt’s ; Elmert" Long was helping cut ice for Clee Hibschman Saturday. He was cranking the car for Hibschman when he slipped and his mouth struck the radiator cap. He knocked out a tooth and cut his mouth so that it was’nec- ! etsary to take three stitches to close the cut. Sylvester Unrue injured his left eye Sunday morning while trying to drive a nail. The nail flew into the air and hit his eye, fortunately missing his eyeball. He is suffering with j hemorrhage of the eyeball. —. DIVORCE GRANTED Mrs. Katherine Weidner of Hotel Milford, Milford, was granted a divorce from August W’eidner, in Warsaw, last week, on. the grounds of j non-support, cruel and inhuman treatment. Mrs. Weidner was granted her former name, Katherine Stoller. The couple was married June 24, 1929 and separated July 10, 1930. In a letter sent to his mother, Leon Counolly writes that Miss Priscilla Wyatt has recently been married and is in Texas on her honeymoon. ,11 o ;C. C .Bachman is ill with the flu.
* THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
WOMAN DIPLOMAT TELLS HOW WOMEN MAY BRING END OF WAR
The following article published in the Feb. 27th issue of “The Union Signal,” publication of the W. C. T. U- is reprinted in the Journal at the request of Mrs. Josephine W’oods. It describes the character of the representative of the feminine sex who is attending the disarmament confer ence, and tells Dr. Mary E. Woolley’s opinions of how women can brihg about the end of wars. When the SS "President Harding” sailed from New York on January | 20 it carried the American delegation to the Disarmament conference now in session at Geneva. f One of the most prominent members of this delegation was Dr. Mary Emma Woolley, the first and only woman delegate from 'America to lake her place among the world’s diplomats. Miss W’oolley has been outstandingly interested in and a worker for world-wide peace for many years, particularly so since the war, and probably belongs to more organizations having to do with international friendship and to more associations >f women college graduates than any other person in the United States. She has seen 31 classes of girls graduate from Mt. “Holyoke, had taught at Wheaton and Wellsley for some years before that, and has al--ways kept in personal touch with alumnae. Several times she has presided over the Conference on the Cause and Cure of War which has doqe much to educate women in their thinking along economic and political lines. Not only has Miss Woolley been a leader and moulder of woman’s thoughts in America along the lines of peace—her interest for these years on international questions has led hdr ,to find or make opportunities to discuss them with representatives of other Countries. In 1922 she made a six month tour of China as the only woman member of the China Educational Association; in 1925 and again in 1927 she attended the Institute of Pacific Relations in Honolulu; she was chosen this year among other outstanding leaders to make a nine-month investigation of foreign missions in the Far East, having special reference to new economic developments and the rise, of the nationalistic spirit in India and China, but was obliged to resign. Having seen many causes grow and prosper from small beginnings which she has advocated, among them woman suffrage and prohibition (she is a member of the Woman’s National Committee for Law Enforcement) her belief in the final coming of world peace would be natural. A recent account of an inter- 1 view with a writer for the New York Times, however, is indicative of her careful thought along this as along other lines. „ Women Want Peace. "During the year,” she said, "I meet literally hundreds and hundreds of American women, of all types and conditions and I can truthfully say that nhe woman who is not in favor of some new and more pacific basis for international relationship is an exception. , ' “1 believe the majority of women are in favor of peace, and of the limitation and reduction of armaments. Moreover, I believe that part of their strength and their effectiveness as peace advocates lies in the fact that they have not had the experience in directing affairs that men have had. Their imagination is not cramped by the traditions of the case that war has always been and therefore must always be. Their attitude is that it must stop. Here, as many times before, may rush successfully in where masculine angels fear to tread .... "Another asset which women have as peace advocates, in my opinion, is
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS The Journal is furnished with the following transfers of real estate by Houton C. Fraxer & Son, abstractors, Warsaw: William H. Williams Jr., to Leo O. and Fern Baird, lot 36 Willis Park, SI Tracy Mock Cline to Dwight Mock, part lot 3 South Park, SI Geo. H. Gant to The Marion National Bank, lot adj. Forest Glenn, sl. Henry E. Dreirer to Evansville Savings Bank, 60 A. sections 5 and 8 Plain township, SI. David R. Ross to Amos R. Gawthrop, 154 acres sections 12 and 13 Van Buren tdwnshjp, SI. Lloyd Fell's to Rhebe Felts, lot 10, Winsor’s addition, Syracuse, sl. John D. Baurrigartner to Ailine Heiniger, lot adj. Block 3 Milford SIPapakeechie Corp, to Harry A Burson, lot 6 s?fs. 2 Papakeechie, S6W. MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED Miss Vera Mae Stevens was married to Blaine B. Schang at the Evangelical parsonage, Wednesday afternoon. The ceremony was performed by Rev. R. G- Foust. r » The bride and groom are from Columbia City and were attended by Mr and Mrs. Wilbur Steel, also of Columbia City. “Hell, Divers’* at the Crystal, Ligonier next Sunday, Monday and Tuesday.
their often criticized habit of seeing things in terms of the individual. When we begin to think of laborers rather than labor, someone has said, industrial problems are on their way to settlement. I believe this is true of war also. This faculty of looking at the individual rather than the mass, helps women to visualize the suffering on both sides, and has spurred their post-war peace activities.” “But,” asked her interviewer, “didn’t people feel exactly that way prior to the World War?” “No, I think the attitude then was far less intelligent. We were lulled by the thought that we had arrived. Now our efforts are more practical and deliberate. We see the economic as well as the political inter-relations of nations. "To4ay with the pocketbook of the world ’all but thrown on the scrap heap, men are beginning to realize that we must have a new basis of understanding. The great industrial leaders and bankers take a different attitude from that of a few years ago. They see that there cannot be economic stability at home” when other nations are in chaos. They are coining to appreciate the value of other methods besides w®r in keeping recalcitrant nations in line.” Asked what she thought of the boycott as a preventive of war Miss Wolley replied: “To succeed, the boycott would have to have an overwhelming public opinin behind it. In any I suppose we cannot get away altogether from some form of force, only 1 look toward some kind of international police--a very different thing from national armies.” “You don’t believe that we shall live to see that, do you?” “Yes,” answered Miss Woolley, with that convincing serenity of hers, “I believe you may. It is only at all unthinkable, considering the great strides public opinion has already made since the war. . . . It is not like ly that everything will be accomplished at one sitting and I cannot even talk about it until I have studied the matter a great deal More thoroughly. Bulky documents are already arriving from the State Department, and I am cancelling all my engagements for the next three weeks to get oriented.” What Women Can Do To Help In reply to the question of what xyomen in general can do to educate people to thinl peace and disarmament, Miss Woolley replied eagerly, "They have the greatest opportunities, through both the school and the home to replace chauvinistic ideas with hose of international co-opera-tion. “I often think what might be accomplished in this,country if mothers and sisters and aunts would inform themselves on international affairs and turn the family conversation to them. Table talk alone could change our prejudices. And think of the results not only on world understanding but on American conversation!” While these suggestions “represent sometimes no easy task,” as she realizes, Miss Woolley believes that problems are often simplified if mothers confer and work together. “One of the exceedingly hopeful things,” she went on, “is-the number of study groups of women who are getting together in al 1 parts of the country to study international questions.” Women should let their representatives at Washington know their opinions, finally they should encourage exchange fellowships for women with foreign countries, such exchanges being most valuable in the relatively small colleges. These students are today keeny alive to international contacts and questions, and Miss Woolley believes that thej solution for many of the world problems may depend on their thinking.
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STARLINGS (Continued from Page One) of going further south. During the warm*4i of January and February the lake seemed alive with these mallards and “mud hens” and the moment the hunting season was over they seemed to realize it, as they would permit people to come close to them before taking wing. With the heavy freeze last week, the ducks were busy keeping a section of the lake open and free from ice. Just off Kale Island hundreds of these birds kept milling around in a circle to keep the water from freezing there. They seemed to take turns according to “Herb” King who watched them day after day. Many of the ducks would bn the ice near the open water while it was crowded with other ducks. Their tqrn at paddling came later.
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