The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 January 1929 — Page 4

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and I e'l in English in one

Dartmouth.”

“Wherever coeilucati' n ffoes, occordinpr to Mr. Drown, “the humanit-

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forr.ia and Washington.

o

in which such legislation will Le man allcprod seciet armaments, and 1 “ > e n^n.sn m

| sought this year, utheis an New | the nationalist, anti-Locarno jrress in York, New Orleans, Pennsylvania, Germany rejoiced, “We told you so.

Massachusetts, Ohio, Colorado, Cali- Later assurances that th*- Anglo- . , , .

French naval pact is dead, althoagh I ics have come to be looked o „ . , 8rit " h -r-rr

Rotarians Named wiped • ut the ismal impression which tance with sue or 1 1 ' |,intu .? 1 A\Uiai iau» naillCU th ^ in The Loc- ?lory as huma ' rnadc -

arno humptv-dun.pt> will he mended, Past year the -even prcsulents of again, hut for many it will henceforth 1 even important separate n ll. ges for

CASTLE

MA I INI.i: DMIO 2:15 P. M.—NIGHTS 7 AM) il p. >, SAT. AM) SI N. <ONTINLOIS, 2 TO 11 |\ M.

On ommittees

Reduced

KEV. RAPH AEL ON CREDENTIALS AND C. C. GIfLEN ON REGISTRATION COM MITT EE.

Kmilv I Crocks

(>iu)icc

2.50

Two Ureencastle Rotarians have 1 ; been named on important committees i J for the annual District Conference of 11 Indiana Rotary dubs whic h will he | j held in Terre Haute February 21 and | The Rev. Victor L. Raphael, secre- | tary of the Greencastle Club has been 11 named chairman of the Credentials , Committee for the conference and O. [j C. Gillen ha.' been named on the Registration committee. The Terre Haute Club will entertain the Indiana Rotarians in grand shape this year and the Greencastle Rotarians will assist them in every way possible, and practically the entire local membership will attend the meetings.

• 4 4* tx

S. C. PREVO CO.

■ ><i>*+ti*t*£v*t<*l**XX*XZXtt*Z*XXZZZZZZZZZ*Z

r c ii \ugi; .2 (UP)

SEEK

IN 1)1

FOR RENT—One furnished modern sleeping room, 202 East Washington St. 2-lp.

FLAPPER BANDIT

« INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 2. (UP)—A 44 flapper bandit made her debut in Indianapi.lis today and outlined her plans for making a series of appear-

ances in the near future.

The girl, young, pretty, aided two I companions in robbing Mervin Fall-

' mer, a driver for the Omar Baking

\POLISHMENT OF Company.

( \piT\| 14 MSHMKNT I Fullmer was accosted by a bandit ,, j who boarded his truck and forced at W M’OI 'S i.tn •> (CP. i the point of a pistol to drive to a

Ion ly spot.

he only a thing nf rag- and patches. Stresemann's westward policy may evoke a loud “whoa!” from the Ger-

man t leetorate.

At least a pas ing estrangement superceded the drawing Franco-Ger-man reconciliation, while (le: many - attitude toward England cooled slightly. Reemergence of German trade as a serious competitor of Britain in the wort '- markets toutribated towards

chocking perhaps only temporarily, the just as 1 think jht> •'hounl pi. -England policy of German state - by both men and women, f

men.

Meanwhile German relations with ! Soviet Russia th- year underwent fluctuations. The so called Do net /, conspiracy trial in Moscow, at which three German Engineers also with | fifty Russian- answered a charge of | “sabotaging” the Soviet coal-mining industry, unleashed a storm of antiRiissian sentiment in Germany and rewilted in the fupture of Russo-German economic negotiations last March. The mildness of the Soviet court toward.I the accused Germans considerably ap-

peased opinion here.

Germany’s relations with all these countries were continually ov. rshad1 owed by the reparation- problem.

I Meeting in Geneva in Septembei, the i'"“n more satisfactory than

i’ow. rs deei ed to appoint a commit- dt'esent.

women—Barna.d, Bryn Mavvr, Mount Holyoke, Radcliffe, Smith, \ assar and Wellesley, announced that they were working together on tho pi"blem <>1 larg. r endowment for the colleges. One of their number, Mi- Marion Edwards Park, pro-id. t . I’tyi. Mawr, takes both a present and future view of coeducation, Mr . Eastman report-. Miss Park say.- “1 think that women shoal I study along with men

• taught a n’t be-

lieve that the most varied . xperionc. is not the most valuable exp. t m e of education,—'the shock of mind .

mind’.”

Yet for many reason-, M Patk think- that the day for coeducation i

not yet ripe.

“With the men's eolleg - . t th. East more than full, and th w- m. n’ colleges equally so, and with many universities loath to inen .. th. :. numbers,—especially the uu . ■ • . women, it cem. im))o- ib!.- '..i , . education to come about at • nc ■ r

■asily. l'ciha|i' by the tin

psychology will have put at our disposal facts and principle, which wi’l make thu joint life for mei and v.o

it is at

TODAY LAST TIMES OLIVE HORDKN and JACK PICK FORD In “LANG WAR”

-TOPICS—FABLES

COMEDV

THURSDAY—FRIDAY

lee of experts to fix the total sum o! |

iadc

in 1

hill to h

•.hment .f Capital punishudiama will be s tight in a j i . duced in the coining at th reiju. -: of the Ind•h of the Icag.ie to abolish

:ii-linit nt.

in '..eking r, Ver.saillcs, j ..f th- I ague, announced II he on.' of the nine state ■

j]G BRIDGE CABLES PUT INTO PLACE

IN pi \ \ \POLIS Lit ESTOCK INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 2. (UP)— Hog prices were generally steady at the Union Stockyards today. Bulk 150 to BOO pounders sold for $!*.1(). The top price paid was $11.20. Receipts were estimated at 10,000. In the cattle and calves division the market was steady on receipts of 2.(100 and 1,000 head, respectively.

reparations to be collected from Ger-j many and examine the possibility of evi-ing the Dawes plan. Fran c di--i.laved a wish to replace the present provisional anang merit by :» definite leparation- settlement: Britain and (he United State- made clear that they share this .b sire, France mu-', meet a 407,000,000 dollar del.t payment to America in 11*21) and hopes tn daw this sum from German reparations. Coming months are expected C. crystallize the icparations -ettlement along new lines, a task delayel by Europe until after the Ameiican elections. Hoover’s regime will be faced with the necessity of cracking the hard rut of German reparations and interallied debts. In Gemiany, the new Hermann Mueller government, which

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CDMEDV “CAMPING (M l K1NOGRAM NEWS

COMING SOON ‘Sally's Shoulders'

Steers I."ought $10.50 to $15, vealers succeeded Chancellor Wilhelm Marx's went at $17.50 to $11* and calves clear- cabinet in Jun , maintained the policy

ed at $0.50 to $11.50.

i of loyalty fulfilling' the German repar-,

ation- obligations.

Und'tf i ' -d by icy blast far above the Detroit river, workmen lire . how n u.-ing powerful hydraulic clamps, “compacting”, steo' cal that will support what i- described as the longest bridge spa4 in th w...1.1 -between Detroit and Windsor, Ont. Inset shows ho« the 7,(22 wire- of each cable are laid, in 37 strands, each threi in h. in diameter. The intense pressure changes the shape of thl cable from a h .xagon 21 inches across the corners into a 19-ind circle/ I?

DEER DODGE COOLIDGE BULLETS

STRE8EMANN DISSOLVES "UNITED I RUN I ” OK WARTIME BERI IN, Jan. 2 (UP)—Nothing could more cinvincingly have demonstrate! the firmness of German postwar recovery than the poise with Germany withstood important political and econopiic reverses in 1928. Not that the year, now ending, has 1 been one of unmitigated adversity for ‘Germany. In many respects the country continued to make headway. On the whole, though. Germany expended her energies this year in holding her own, consolidating the gains made -ince the war and absorbing several ■trong shocks to her foreign relations

ard economic sability.

The year saw Foreign Minister Streseniann pursuing his policy of dissolving the “United Front” of Germany’.- war-time enemies. He has largely succeeded in the United States which, with its large loans and heavy investments in Germany, is on the friendliest term- with the German gov ■ rnnient. Indeed, it is doubtful whether Berlin today would make any vital move in international affairs which ran counter to Washington’s wishes. Stiesemann’s primary efforts how1 ver, were devoted to bringing about a reconciliation between France and Germany. Franco German steel, iron, l>< ta-h and chemical combines provid- ' the economic foundation fora political friend hip between the two “traditional enemies.” Locarno, with its i ceremonious bmial of war-time aniI mosities, supplied the political framework for amicable relations between 1 Paris and Berlin. At the same time, Germany during the past five years

probe tr \<;kdy ( u ses CHAMONIX, France, Jan. 2, (UP)

—While European society is busily 1 gathering together its winter .-ports! gear in readiness for the “season” m \ the Alps, due to begin in a few weekthe French and Swiss authorities are combining to try and find means of iecreasing the number of tragedies

which occur each year.

The toll of death- lias grown stead- | fy as winter sports have incrca ed j n popularity. Foolhardiness on the j iart of climbers in taking risk- i | cry often the cause of disaster, hut s often again even the most exper•nced guides are caught unawares : nd whirled down to death, a - wu ■■ ' hown in the Voralberg disaster twv ears ago when a puity of lx climb j rs, mostly British, were engulfed i [ i snowslide, although led by veteran I

f the Alps.

More than fifty death- wei'e re- , orted la-t -eason in various parts o.‘ ; the Alps, mainly about the f mild- j ble Jungfrau peak, around which bout a dozen climbers forming vat ! ous partie- were lost and never j ound again within about three week . 1 Aeroplanes were brought into use ! .’i searching for numerous missing climbers during last season and they uroved so ,-uccessful that it is likely he service will he extended, the French and Swiss governments each oroviding machines. The most ronurkuhle air rescue was that perbrmed by the French airman. Lieu- \ tenant Th ret, who succored a mi-s-tig Mpinist who had been lo t for

WASHINGTON, Jan. 2 (UI’i Use of radio by commercial eompa:i i ies in it more extensive plan of pub : lie confpuihication is a step nearer ■ ’eality following the allocation f 55 j of the (>3!*' radio channels bctwei r ! 1500 and tiOOO kilometers to \,:riou.applicahts. by the federal rad com-

nissiod.

United Press Wireless, Die., and

'hi other pres- associations and n v. ■- i papers were allotted 20 of the.-e ili:;!i-

i nels for transmitting news.

The commission allocated Td ehan- . nels to marine servic".-', (14 to uvial tion services, 5 to railroads, (> to port1 able stations, 134 to amateurs, 100 to visual broadcasters, 4 to ixporiment stations and 70 to cominereial ]Hiint to point services. The government reserved 1)5 channels and s:i are in controversy between the United States and other North Amei i. an na-

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IA (,!I!I.S IN A DVZZLING VARIETY OF IWIHI/IM, PLE.Vn OF FUN. MUSIC AND VAI DEVII.I I Mld!’l.!l i E CHANGE IN PROGRAM EACH DAY-TWO s||i,VMATINEE SATURDAY—FINE PK'TlRK PKOGKDI

IN tONJENCtlDN.

L’ons. i Existing stations et th ih/ I h Universal W’iieless Corpora-I poratjon cf America ..ini t! M ti i'i \v:: authorized to construct Radio and Teleiraph Cnnipa tran-mitting -tatioiis in 110 cities, ’nut disturbed by the c :■ i t

NEWSPAPER M ADE OF CORNSTALKS MAKES ITS DEBUT

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ttlK,s lnk '‘early and can !•.• produced executives and other promir.cnto viewed the

The papn

at a great rciluction in cos,. (5 y first edition printed on tl, new y

THE> FA T “HEAVY MONEY FOR BASEBALL THRILL3

had eemented her fii*-ndship with Kng| ‘h' aitman, on a ret-onnai-s-iand: ind*-i-d. followi g the Anglu-Rus- :,nc, ‘ l r 'P> ‘lew- over the climber, but sian break, Germany veered appteci-1 vv,,s una ble to land. The pilot re- 1 ably toward England and away from * urn,,, i l” i*'' base, chalked a message Ru-sia. of instruction on the underpart of the 1 In the mi st of these development.- ! blont? k w ing-, and flew again to the disclosure of the AngD-Francc na\al! s l M,t "here the elimber had been!

and military pact la-t August canto as a bombshell. Germany felt strongly that the pact wa ■ aimed at herself and threatened to ruin the harvest of Stees | einann's reconciliation policy tow-aid the western powers. Germany believed that tin- pact restored Hu- wnr-tinu Anglo-French i ntinte and reinforced h lench military hegemony on the eoninent, ti iking u -harp blew at Locarno.

-ighted and was able to communicate in this manner the intelligence which enabled the missing man U> take a

route to safety.

CO-EDUCATION

Holding that coeducational mar- ! i riages are inclined to l»e “.-tuffy" an i 1 often result in mental maladjustment 1 when they occur immediately aft: r

be*

, Unaware oi the fame they », re mi. ing, deer aimed at by Pre ident Coolidgc : iipccssfully ducked two presidential bullets dur .'r a hunt on Floyd s ■ k 1’onin ula n,-:ir the Sapelo island est .. • o." Howard E. < oflin, who h.. - holiday gue.-ts the president and CooiUi i I’hoto show, tooling,, rt turning in an ox cart fro.’ , hunt and looking somewhat depressed over his failure

the score at the end of the hunt bong

as a tvintiij,

Deer, 2; CooUdgCj O.

‘How is it possible for England to graduation, Rebecca Huoper Eastthe arbiter between Frauee andl mHn > well-known noveli t writes or Germany,” Stre-emann i ulignantly '‘•''"me Dangers of CiN-ducatinn” Mr asked, "if England is boun to France Eastman al-o points out what she reby a naval agreement and if England (raid' a- more serious dangers in eo-I is a partner in the affairs of one of education than too early marriages, ‘•he parties?” and one of these i< that the presence The A; gln-lTomh pact of 1928 ser-h’f ii'i , 'l- drives men out from courses iou-ly weakened the effect of Locnr- h* fi'"' arts, literature and the langu- ))'* and administered a -etbark to thelages. She quotes from the invrstiga- <>'• iiiun policy of reconciliation with tion.- of Rollo Walter Brown to prove I-ranee mid England. Speetutor-at the bet point. Mr. Brown found that "all League a-senibly in Geneva last Sep- of the men who major d in English ;i t< oilier recalling the Briand-Strese- the graduating classes* reported from niann love-fea.-ts of the past two years fift'*'n of the most important coeduuddc nly heard llria d diver a eational ccdlege-and universities, w r|,e.,.i,pide ■•nt’Hi :d attack upon Gf lew • ■ by ’"-o th;:.-! th<> P v . ’

piliior.air.-t, they haven’t ^n,j, n V 1 ’, 1 r! cc t this quartet a “pretty penny.” However, being hat.t r.ing t r i r . i . ! Ruppcrt, top center, has by producing P pn ' J , . .s'pr .y . . n moe.' y he sank into the New York Yankees. » Wilba r w ■ . U 1" i , ; ‘o) Cub . estimataa hi. hact-.l! Wo v.o cost hlf

'.V/,;!

f 6,00,1,V

•ft.r share in the Gian'.:. a|v» Pr. > , av.vur, nas jusi parted wrtn arou.vw — i- a ®L ? 1-b. for himself and associate- T*’ ‘“L r cc ® tcr > kissed one fortune goodbye in .buying Ik® ' ‘

right

money he

■'e. * Cubs, estimates his baseball connections have cost New- York contractor, has just parted with $750,000 for

t

associates and is

spending another buying players.