The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 November 1928 — Page 1

I. ' rflR WKATHBK • and " " mer - ^ f"l*** + + *** + *

Uk thirty-seven.

♦ AI L THE HOME NEWS « ♦ HNI1KD PRESS SERVICE ♦ ♦♦+++++++*++++♦♦

SOUTH

tNNED BY

NATIONAL BOOK MEEK

—O

Monday, November 12th will mark the ojiening of the annual National

w w /\f\\TT*T\ ^‘'k, which is being; sponsored HOOVtK u y W ' ,ma: ' ,s ( ' luh ’ with Miss I 'da liv/vr V '^lls, teacher of English in the local high school, as chairman.

ERKENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, NOV EM R ER 10, 1928.

annuaTred

No. 23.

CROSS DRIVE IS UNDERWAY

jvt.ELEtT TO TOUR hHKHK AN COI N TRIES

| H IS WINTER.

diplomatic

BAINBKIDLE WINNER

Bainbridge defeated the Veedcrsburg high school bsisket ball team, 10 to 31 Friday evening in an interesting game. The North Putnam boy. held a two-point lead at the half, 21 19. Dickson and Morris were outstanding for Bainbridge while Flory

looked best for the looser?. .KKEI.SYil.U: WIN-;

Two Reelsvillr basketball te m. are icti • ’ed victors in game played Fii

MEMBERSHIP day night. The Reelsvil i chool MEETINti net tosser.; downed the fi; ti; g Staun Rod Cross Organization Functions twn a '^ r «'K«tion, 20 4- Lb Rob LewiFor The Relief Of Suffering Hu- WRS ' ut ‘ itandl "g !, ’ r ,h "

Many different stores will co-oper-

i ate over the city to make the affair Mks * FK ANK IK INNER, CITY, a success. The book store windows PUTNAM COUNTY CAM-

windows will arrange attractive dis- PAIGN CHAIRMAN.

MOVE' V ' ' n <ir ' llr to intprcst lhp 1'ublic,;

' and Miss Ruth Owen, teacher of art SEEK LARGER — hi the city schools, will work in the ,jH» Mission of America’s .schools with the students, and arrange

, Kwcutive Regarded As a display at the Public Library. , Por ^ ^ | wns outstanding for the winners. I, nt Statesmanship Stroke. Mrs. Fred Thomas, librarian, has manity Throughout World” The Leelsville Indep. mn : ts announced that there are 45 new [ ’ eit the Van Bur.-n lodtiH’.dent.., 1. ti

MRS. 0STR0M CHOSEN FOR HIGH OFFICE

N WIEI) PRESIDENT OK . H. M. s. OF NORTHW F.ST INIMANA

M. E. CONFERENCE

unattainable be uise “man is wild j and greedy, and gentleness w ill never rule in thi.-. topsy turvy world.” Lissauer hopes this new play, transplanted into English by Prof. Manthey Zorn of Amlin t college, Massachusetts, will give a more correct view of his pros' nt beliefs and aspirations than the “Hymn of Hate” that gained him worldwide attention.

WINDY CITY MAYOR MAY RESIGN JOB

Rl MORS RIFE IN ( Hit \GO R» (i \RI)INt, I’tiNNllU E Ai TION

OF THOMPSON.

\T TERRE HAITI.

"BIG

HILL”

IS

III N1

Several Greencastle Women Included On Program At Sessions Held On

I hutsday And Friday.

. ,|to Calif., Nov. 10. (UP) | children’s books in the library, which I ’ . . . m < M'lII *s.,f . 1. :u:4 . . x!

.. [[nover’s decision to make l ,ut 0,1 exhibit at this time, yed South American tour as; ^ |l ' Public i- invited to the library

t 0 ids administration i. jas a brilliant stroke of statjpand appears to promise an Lgreer in the white house. L “good will” mission on a L),.. wmething ughiue. No ' L,dent-elect ever undertook r like it. The only presidenthat rivals it is Woodrow visit to Europe to swing It among the people there bel League of Nations scheme, articipate in the peace coti-

and literature the parents.

will be given out to

INTERESTING LECTURE BY DHAN MUKERJl

BRILLIANT NATIVE OK INDIA SPOKE HERE ON FRIDAY

KV ENING.

Ill 1 ’ American Red Cross has appealed to the American people for a minimum membership of five million men and women. The policy of the American Red Cross provides that tin national and international work f (hat organization he financed by the relatively small membership dues i p. id by five million Americans reprej enting every section of our country,

bind every walk of life.

The President of the United States ha- .-tated that ''I he American Red Announcement wr. made today Cross is as democratic as the people Harry P. Vondei s. hmilt, >v\n r

THEATERS TO OPEN SUNDAY

SUNDAY SHOW S W U.l III UU \ TI RED IN LOCAL Cl. U

HOUSES SUNDA) .

Mrs. Henry Ostrom was elected president of the Northwest Indiana Conference of the Woman's Home M ioiiary Society at the meeting on

ARM TO SDK A K

Prof. G. O. Arlt of the German Department of Del'auw University, will be the speaker at the Sunday evening service in the Presbyterian Chrch. His addres will recall in- j teresting feat on of the signing of tho Armistice in D.hn. Sunday will

also mark tho Fifth Anniversary of j the dedication of the ( hureh’s educa- CHICAGO, Nov. 10. (UP) U tional and . oeial building. This firmed rumors flew about th ci< t ovont will receive attention in the day that Mayor "Dig Bill" Th op Sunday School at !':;!() under Drof. (!. ' was about to resign a a re alt It. Manhait, .Supt , and at 10:.'15 in the crushing defeat which h, >!

Mayor Ihompson Would Make No Comnient Regarding Rumor.. W hich

Is Considered Significant.

Friday. The conference was held in

I'errc Haute at the M. E. Temple on the service of worship, whon the pas- ual organization has miffeiad at '

PLEASES LARGE

I a < president-elect, took a L,. Panama canal, hut that (afferent nature. He did not y.le.-hip, hut went on a pri-

Ir

liiefinite mission upon which lill go when he steams out fc. i harbor, within a week );?, on the battleship Mary-[-hip of the fleet, for his briean tour. He plans to

I administration of the

Vr by assuring good-will ; Club, captivated a large audience ii Latin-American neighbors, M( harry hail, not only with his philode now is a source of riv- sophy, but with hie masterful expres-

•;"'d the Government which it serves.”: the Voncastle Theaters in Cremica The Ameiican people are justly nroud He, that both will open !e . tmnorof In domocr itie principle o. their row afternoon and evonin The . n-

Led i .oss and will w >h to sal ouaf. tire program is being carrn I in tin l *- Theater advertisements in (hi i :sue. Al DIKNt L U |- K ,.|( th a t tithe tenth an Greencastle i- one of th' ft v riti.

| niver-ary of the Armistice, be com- in Indiana in which Sundav ,-liov. Dha't Mukerii Appeared In Meharry memerate i by the American ireople have not boeu featured I r yi ar Hall Under Auspices of The b> dedicating themselves anew to thi Many will welcome the opeeing .a

Century Club of City. relief of suffering humanity through the theaters hero, ns Indianapoli i d t. ., in tho Moody Bible institute. 1 " • l| iin, the I ,\a tiv mi from Mount their Red Cross. The leaders of the Torre Haute picture hou.> hav (yiior interesting speakers included F ‘ tna continued to cause widespread .. , ,, , , .’.,50(1 chapters of the American Red drawn heavily from this section here- M White of Pittsburirh win damage in the Valle) below the hill-

-vny po«»lblo »ctim lo.'orc. ^ mmh **

Thursday and Friday' of this week and -evcral Greencastle ladies were lire cut and had parts on the program. Mr . U. W. Hixson presided at the Young People’s Banquet which was held on Thursday evening. Mrs ilenvonridge spoke on the Battle Ground wi rk, and Mrs. A. T. Brigg.had the dosing address on Friday evening with the subject, “Follow

Me.”

One of the main speakers at the confeience was Solomon Birnhaum, Jew, who is pastor of the Christian Jewish Chur h in Chicago, and who a very interesting speaker. He

tor will speak on “Peace Makers.” DAMAGE DUE TO ERUPTION ON INCREASE

MOM I N STREAM Ol LAY A FROM MOI N I I I N \ s < RATER IS

SPREADING.

polls.

Thompson would not < a n< : , which was considered unusual in \i of his booming denial of studi run in the past, hut whether he r or not there is no question al'"ii’ “America First" organiv.ati u : politically defuirct. “Hig Bill the builder" began In -mg ground last spring when the Republican group headed by United State . Senator Charles S. Denecn defeat. I the “America first" ticket in the |ii.-

mary,

KoOert K. Crowe wa idiminate.l his fight for re-nomination as tat .

na _ P"i'« l 'i' hi t nir lit iiii'l'i t u , n or ,j f r that the people may be given T he same high grade pictures : if the work being done in the Mo- Already the eruptions fmm this iuj.picis o .r Giomasti • i k u r) an 0 |,j )or tunity to participate in Red j have been shown here in the pat. i ,um chool. Mrs. Olan Cady of mountain e! Hi" have caused

Cries work through membership.

will feature the daily and Sunday Evanston, a returned missionary, gavi damage estimated at upwards of ten

European nations.

| hurts to forestall even be■jins his administration any Ible a- that which has een«M years around our pol-

iito and Nicaragua,

prir,-. nut yet completed, hr a ttip southw ard along Imast ft'rn San Francisco ■ fTiin, w'nii at i canal and Lima, Peru, kitaffo and across the AnN°s Aires and back by F and Rio Do Janeiro, th' |ti be visited including Panb, Chile, Argentina, Brazil

(tuny.

["ill visit Havana, Cuba, on northward. During his

The Putnam County Chapter is be shows at both tin Cranaua and th< ing organized under the direction of A oneasth theatei . in th' future.

Mrs.

sion of the English language. ; M( . s Frank Donn< , ri local Roll Ca „

Whatever we think and feel will j Chairman,

color what we s y or do. He who fears even unconsciously, or ha- his least i little dream tainted with hate, will inevitably, sooner or later, translate | these qualities into his action.

Think and feel love so that V<*u j Stoner, and Superintendent of Schools LESLIE AND BUSH Go IN .IAN will be able to ppwr out of yourselves 1 Warren J. Yount. U—( EKEMONUN*' ' fNM D-

Among the first of the local subscriber- of the Red Cross Twelfth Annual Roll Call are: Mayor Chas. Mc- | Gaughey, Judge James P. Hughes, Rev. Raphael, K. K. Bartley, Ernest

Fifield and Bokhitl Take Office Dec. 1

pea e and serenity as naturally as a flower gives forth fragance,” he urg

ed.

Ti e enrollment will begin Armistice Pay, November II, and will continue i through Thanksgiving Day, Eight

OTHERS INSTALLED JAN. 1

a le-son in tho Home Missionary

Book. •

TI. i-e who attended the conference n Greencastle were: Mrs. T. E I vans, Mrs. ('. T. Peck, Mrs. W. II Jennings, Mrs. Heuveiiridge, MiHenry Ostrom, Miss Mildred Dim mkk, Mrs. W. ( ' Rom, Mrs. E. VY Hix - n, Dr. and Mrs. A. T. Briggr.d Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Allen, Jr. * ^0^*5—

CATANIA. SICILY, Nov. 10 (UP)

Rolling along ot a rate of 15 miles attorney, the most powerful political

job in Chicago; Lon (’mail was d' feated for re-numination for gu\eni iv, and immediately after the primal y the scandals against “Big Bill's” <u-

ganization begun to break.

Morris Eller, his son Judge Emanuel Eller, and 10 other henchmen of the Crowe-Thompson-Smnll gr"'ni were indicted in connection with murder and a dozen sldggings ai d kidnappings which had taken pl.n ■

during the voting.

At the election this week the p t of the Thompsonite wa; e,mi n I' d The only Republican that gut into office on the state or Cook emint t

million dollai and this damage will be increased it the wide stream of l ava (ontinued to pour down on th<

fertile valleys

The Lava stream reached the railload bridge i . ar dnsca'i a* 2 A. M today, i.iirca.ing : peed ■I volume r..- In Ii iav i ' : - added In Hie dc-

trut live t oi n ut.

The advanced -tream now is mad) ; kets wa Judge John A. Swam-'in, the up of two of the currents which have I man who defeated t rowe in the p-:-

ficial'

. , , —- —- — Two of the new state c

ihe Ei -t and the ^ i , ' st t- lp|,p ' ,f ' p,u | hundred ft.00 memberships is the elected Tue.day, Otto Fifield,

quota of the chapter. Mrs. Donner, Point, secretaiy of tate-eleet, and however, today stated that the com Archie N. Bobbitt, Engli. It, -tate ."id mittee expected the local enrollment jtor-elect, will take office It. ember to greatly exceed the minium quota, j. Fifield will succeed I- dei. k E Many persons will be asked for the gchortemeir, ecretury i.r-late fm th other three types of memberships last four year-, n I B"i)bitt will u

t OMPOSKR OF “HYMN OF II ATE” BECOMES PACII ISI

, , carrying with them fees of five, ten. ceed L. S. Bowman, under whom I '

i, , • • y— — - | relationship is possible between per- i i .. .

ktnal railway to the eastern 1

inactive; the West too active. It seems to me that in America youth ihere and there, dividing energy and time in so many things, that it would

. be impossible to master anything mama on the way south h<‘ ! thoroUKhlv; even a friendship. For no

It th. ..Ml, M* .... th.! .hip p„ s .ibl. P..-UP,, doll.r^

| sons except through the complete giv-1 | ing of ourselves to another person.’ Friends should be enjoyed, one at a

time, Mr. Mukerji said.

Explaining the Hindu’s philisophy of non-resistence Mr. Mukerji told the, story of the India pea-ants who, upon the suggestion of Ghandi not to fight or organize to force the government to see their situation, just refused to pay exorbitant and unfair taxes until the government took some action. H<' said 80,000 persons, with heroic calmness, just stood unarmed and unmoved when the army forces with aut. mobiles, trucks, idrplanes ami machine guns came to their com munity to force payment. The first fiotl day, second day passed; and it seemto i pd that something had gone wrong j with the guns. The third day the gov-

u -_. J) • I emment amt ■ nMnafft to tho com ' RAZIL I-IRE I munity saying Hie people had won • Nov. 10.(UP)—Auth-| out . t | la t committee would be upay investigated the origin | pointed to look intc the situation; and 'Mile ! "te which destroy-! t | |( . nl!1 tt,.|' would be icmodied. Non-

"t of th« "

That Kipling was the greatest writ-

' v; " 11 stove red by a night Pr in K nK i a nd if not in the world, wa.«as unable to extingi. ] Ml Mukerji’* belief. Kipling more

than anyone, even in India protrayed the physical aspects of life in India, he aid, hut even Kipling did not .-ce

the soul of the Hindu.

I “India wants you, but not your v ' 1 ' 1 money, not material thing-. When the West and the K:i-t com. together,

lined in a iicie unit, catryiitg detraction into a :ew territoiy. Only two p. i on- have been kill'

Iecause, tile gnat m tel gave warn ing before it unlus.-ed it- varie<!

(reams of lava, but 12,000 were fore

ed to evacuate their b":.. in th

f iat o'

mar.. All the . uc; • ful eandal save Swanson weie Demiierats.

th I

I tr

lavana, the Maryland will hwurd to New York, where ent-elect is expected to land gly part of the new year. iot stops By Nicaragua, h" Itigate the possibilities of liscussed Nicaraguan canal, he has taken an interest, al decision has not been 'it visiting that country, ttaus of the trip await corndiplomatic negotiations. 1 expected to announce the "In n he confers with naval

londay.

r Mr . Hoover will muko the '

n°t been determined, lent-elect has decided hunger son, Allan.

has served as gasoline tax collecto

The larger memberships me neces- Brief ceremonh w:ll n .itk the up. n sary for the support of the local work nig of their two yeat t i- of off' ■ "f the chapter, inasmuch as only fif- Dn January 1, the filiation < ty ci nts of each membership fee goes James M. Ogden, Indi.ie ipolis, att

to national headquarters for the fin- ney-general-elrct, nd Mi lancing of national and international Brown, Winamac, wlm v | work. From the one dollar member- perter of the -uprevi ship, fifty cents goes to national head- courts, will take | ! i. quarters and fifty cents remains in succeed Art in I (.ill the treasury of tho county chapter. Brown will -uec ed \ while front the five dollar membership Franklin White. I! $4.50 remain- here. The f 10.00 fee mark the heginnin; will net the chapter $9.50, while $25 Inmis of David A. M’

HAMBl’RG, Germany, Nov. 10 (UP)—The ntan who wrote thi

“Hymn of Hate” calling a wartime ic.eeful little village, at tin

Prus-ian militaristic curse u)mn Eng Hie mountain,

land's head, has turned pacifist. That man, Ernst lissauer,, wdn made "Cott Strafe England,” a by wind throughout the world, voiced today in an exclusive Armistice annivei -at > -tatenient to the United Pre a fervent pacifist plea for world

peace.

Lissauer, now inveighs against international preparations for the next war; and brotherly love has become : e keynote of his literary produeti .i s iii place of his wartime song: “By .-hell from sea, by bomb from air. te day will "Ou: greeting shall he spread,

the elect. "Making each English homestead

. Green-htn;. “A mansion of the dead."

('lily a few huit 'ing

nig in M t call < lainit .

" at di - -t' V tint \ i. t

' e tmyeittg i* it wa

- me :|!)0 y< . ;i'...i. The Unit'd i’re.,s

.i|)"roaeh( (I tin gie. t ea

s Gi in vi V elected te <1 nppellati Ogd( n wil and Me . Edwatd

A KMISTK K D A >

Atmistiee Day is a day to ( iniiiin i - orate th" allied victory of I Pis ,i I to pay homage to our deee.i . d e.u . rades and veterans of the Woihl AA'ar ' lint there are others win in w e wu .■ (and I the uniform that did wondei in (hi.

of U. | county towards winning the wa , r

eit>. I installed all ate less In. .el, u, I I ;

i" troyei, sugar and other thing u the l e i

“over there” might g'd enmu'.li to polldot't; eat. Hie ( illy things Hint w . pn

Irom th" | tiful were water, ah and .11 i " "ii the South farmers worked lute and '. .. I, | u’ ui

ml city ml ntint-

t’arrita A alley which i

east .-lo|ie of Mount Kti. . Three | extra fields, the faetm streams could In een rolling from 1 people worked extra hour

the mouth . neighlinrhoe

the Crater .'.II in tin id themsclve to iloi t

1 nf Monte I'lumento.

I i

Tin .

Nl.AA I KLEPHONK ( CMP AN A

memberships will put $24.50 into thi

local funds.

As many of the larger types of Elmer (^. Lo' kyeni', 1 ttsville, wl. memberships will he secured as pos-j weie el. -ted to the inp. .teem' slide, as chapter officers say it i-virt- Harry G. Lc.-lie, l a'.iyUe, wi I I" ually impossible to carry on the local inaugurated a gov.,,. January It service program for the coming year it “I" cere mot]'' • t lot. u,, !i, m revenues derived from the mu R. Martin, Indiat apoli , who v. II b. Id, lar memberships alone. j justice of the -u|,i,me eourl be- ’. |, work hi re i* only a unit of th- ginning Novniibei "i!, i . xp, . ted to national campaign for five million | adiiviister the oath of Tfici for L"

ensuing year. Only lie, . he installat.'.n " l.dg.ir

re-elected judge of the upreme court I.is.-alter, a poet of high repute, of Noel C. .I’eal, N.dde. ville, and now eontrihuting to the he.-t known

Gi “n an liberal publications, repudi ates chauvinism and his own Isdlig-

crent views of former days.

D

“I composed mj ‘Hymn of Hate' not is a fundamental confession of warlike ideals," he told the United Pr, , “hut in my country’s direst lniiir ef need and out of years of di tie- . My poem at that time ex pn "d the -mitiment of virtually the

The I.ong Rranrh Telephone company filed article , uf incorporation with the .See’, tary of .State Saturday at Indiana puli.. The object i t" con frui t, h'dd, own and op, rate tel"phone lin. The ineorpoi T ion include C. H. Catilonwitie, AV. E. Goweii, M

J. Ileplel , 11,1 < arol Mmil e.

M ARID AGE Lit UN - I I,lo) ,1 < lareMee (lurrntt a,el nttortf, I,nth of Indiat,apoli

I Till

second

member* for the „ .

. - , ,, , „ through memberships solicited once a! Rush, Salem, lieut.' t . it-goveinor, entire German people. But soon I

.iz.i vvooii pro- rr -istpru’c worked, said Mr. Mukrrji. ^ ^ ^ ^ many national and int<*r- ‘ lict will tak“ platu at t arm* tin, n. mI to other tasks and wrote 1<\—

* U " national activities of the American ' Mrs. Grace Banta U'rl.Hns, tat' martial poems, like psalms."

Red Cross supported. 1 reasuror-clect

Of this organization Woodrow Wil-[term of office February Id, and R.

son said, “Once a year the American i I’. Wisehart, wh«> w.

Red Cross extends to us the privilege of membership in order that we may have a share in its great work. At Rome and abroad this organization act for the American people, trails

I.' f re firemen could arrivi building was a muss of

—o

NgTD’E

(mrt's st id * group

-day ecenin.f, Nov. 14tli plac? j. roo i, 1, ni ii'l.o "" g'Mern! subnet studied

lected . tate

sufierinteiident <f public instruction, will liegin his term Manh 15.

■, ——o —

SPECIAL PROGRAM The B. Y. P. U. meeting ut the Hap

BELLE I NDIN V. IN> I RIDAY

NIGH I

The Belle I'nion basketball team,

•Every feeling and thinking man * About the services of two must oppose war and do his utmost o gulat who were on th. I,"licit for t„ prevent new wars. Naturally the hr '' aki, '(? tra " ,in P ru, '' s ' ,|pf "» ,ed ,hp experiences of the world war made a Siting N'« w Winchester team last deep impression upon me. Now I am "Mt. t pam " K uar, l”d very eotivinred that a . loser union of Eu- p| " , |v ' 7 il1 thf

nt

■ht

mid win

ropean states is prime necessity. “The next war will be a war of

it will de-

lating into counties# deeds of service ti.-t Church tomorrow e\ ing at 7; ; ga- and machine , and

then life will be (omplete. America human j tar i an jnpulses of a gn at will be conducted by a number of Or stroy not only armies, arsenals and might spend more time in meditation •> iental students of Dd’auw Univer ity. faetorii'*, but also civilians, women - ■ • '• 1 - — " ‘ The ptograni will ee.nsist if two talk, nnd children behind the lines. Nevcr-

and special music. Pete: Hyun will tin h s- the world in 1928 is armed as

l V ' V Di. E khart i n j ja ^ht profit by more activity,

jV,, U n I suggested Mr. Mukerji. •• It n hoped teat a .. Th ,, s „i V ation of India will depend

, , ' A a .'tu«" of this op- peasants and fortun tely for her w And / un ier such an abli* J* ....

A FALSE REPORT

. , FT. WAYNE, Nov. 10. (UP)

per cent <>f India’' population ls feminine voice which comes

MTODATE theatre ''IIJ.E, Nov. 10 (UF’)

and

peasant.

Proof that Mr. Mukerji believes that the East and the W, -t can meet is found in the fact that Mr. Mukerij

rSi'YTrT 1 ":; I** hi - “fh.A

er the telephone to police heaiiquurt er- with the news, "Pepa ha- just shot mama,” has twice in two day-

sum mined officers to

l,1,,n t is being received and

effort is being made to find the person who call-. On the second call an

it , h „ '• T ’beautiful and charming A me ri (Yin - »'■ “ n '' Muk " r|1

the smallest in Indiana'' 11 " 4 „

bit"st improvements

111 PLANT WALNUT TREES PETERSBURG, Ind.. Nov. 10 (UP) not reqvmeiL

--Walnut tree,, may floursh 1"^' FOUND HOME BREW

-penk of his native coui'Try, "Hawaii" never before with weapons of every and Lawrence Young vill talk of sort. Menacing alliances have been •The Necessity of Education in ( hina.’ concluded and violent dictatorships Special music will be a- follows: created. * Jakashi I*eda, cello -olos Margaret “Despite this, a true understand Hu, Vocal solo; and a male trio: jug of war does not animate all hu-

a (Ires- Shiro Sasamori, Peter Hyun, r I ka hi manity nor stop the massacres of the

found amiss. An I*»'dii. Everyone i invit- to utti nd. past.

( RI)AA N J Ai* RULER

undirtaker was notified of the trag-

edy and ap| [Milire, only

ra^ap^UlTh; address with KYOTO. Japan. X“' M ! i’n,ior « ra»hant rainbow —an omen

to find his services were Under

of gOIKU luck

DIES SUDDENLY

’ '"A-. Nov. 10. (UP)- to ionic on I ml new barren ' ■ 54, prominent Ind- ectlon of IntL* due - ' ! P mitinlnff o

-Alleged

Hlrohito today was

crowned emperor of all Japan in a colorful rite that wa.- old as tin

Japanese empire.

Guns roared a lalute as the new

| r ’ 11,1,1 president of the coal. Planting is now in progress f"! KI.'AGOfL N'“ fimnd in the emperor the 124th in Japan’s history, the abyss, and " A L’ nk at Marion, died lowing u. ci -ful expel‘iinTn - a \' .i' ' 11 _ L , in the and his i nipi mouiii"! tin- ih. for hearth and

at Marion, died lowing successful

"n attack of appo- ago.

Lissauers new Ideals find expression in his latest drama, “Jeptha’s wife," already enacted throughout Germany. This work, he explained, echoes the cry "f men and unborn generations against coming wars. Speaking through Leah, wife of Jeptha, judge of Israel, unhorn mankind asks whether it, too, must be annihilated in the battle of the nations, in

in the livers; and die

for hearth and harvest and gold.” The poet said this play emerged

, —— njano at home here has resulted in the and . . “ftir «n ana-.L piano ai Massey who will be in the throne room of the royal palUnder supervision of Eli Hendricks arrest " • ^ j 4 m* and promised 75,000,000 Japane.-e f rom his own inner struggles and his

'* Association. .planted by u crew of twelve men. ^aw.

half. Th" final score was 20 to 12, Bell" Union. Goodpastui" and Dor- ; ett played hi for he le m" team. IN DI AN APOI.IS I.IA I. UK l\ INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 10. (UP)— H'g piic - were 25 to 10 eenl! higher at the Union Stockyard- today. Bulk 100 to 275 pounder closed out at $9.75. Receipts were . itirnateil at

4,500.

The cattle and calve markets were steady on receipt of 200 and 150 head respectively. Beef steers were quoted at $11.25 to $15.75. Vealers brought $17 to $18 and calves $(>.50 to $11. The sheep market was steady. —o Filial report in the ea. " of Samuel Ratcliff et al versus R. Ratcliff has been filed in the Putnam Circuit

court.

——— o—Ed Schulz re.-i itig re ai Limedale is in a serlcu- eon ition it the Putnam County Hospital as a n nit of injuries 'istaineil whi n he fainted and fell through a glu inily this morning. He suffered a badly lacerated fare and lip. Fifteen -titches were

organizations, inolhe. ,

cs, brothels and .-i.-tii . w Im. • 1 u I" at home was nerve wn 'king, In i r their loved ones might inert with some disa ter, while wi i. . ui I our people at home w i. <i K. There are three pi pi in i ■ mty who ib serve honoral.!" i , ;

they worked da and

cause. They were C. C. Hu, mail of the liberty lion,I i. niei ! , Mr. Hurst sold $2,97.'>,i | T - Ii of bonds; A. G. Blow : , f the War Saving.- commit •, er $100,000 in War I t and Harry Moore, rha , ' e draft board picked m • t ' ' m county 's army to sen" i . t , , . These men were criti.'i I'd r • '.r le. - by tile anti-Aliien, an ei"

went ahead and did a tie

be t, and all they rcci i' • ,| I extra wink aad worry v i tli ledge they were fighting , i

that was just and fair and

in the end.

Armistice Day is a day of p 'a.'e, but in peace we honor out b . I and those who helped win th" ,. by sacrifice which was rhuractini (• .f the Putnam lloosicr, and i " you one nnd all to alt nd e i ting Sunday afternoon at the

chool gymnasium.

Putnam County's War Rcord. l iberty Bend sales, $2 9 .,100 W. H. S. Bales, $400 000. Men served in army, 980. Men Overseas, about 50. Men wounded, about 15.

Men killed, 23.

I>. P. U. men in war, 150.

D. P. U. men killed, 10

Money donated to v Ifari-

(estimated). $50,000

Not a bad record fm a i ■. >■/ . 25,000 population and with linn'' i '

sources.

(Signed) .11'.SSE M I M P( Mri ER AN'S OF FOi;!'.li;' 5A

Hub

rdi 1 •,

love of peace, but he suggested hi-

peaceful ideals were perhaps forever lu ® los * th ‘’ 8ash on hi* Du

FUDI B ALL St tiRI. ■—o—■ I irsl Quarter Del’auw, 12; Indiana Cent: Firs) Half Def’snw, IP; Indiana (' nt