The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 September 1930 — Page 5
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THE PAH.V R XXXF.R. GRFENCASTLE. INDIANA. FRIDAY. SKI'T 5.1980, ~~
s page Fiya
osges S[)ared During Hedic War Shelling irEW TOW NS DEsikoyED 111 |{ |\<; WOKI.II (ONFI.ICT; I I I TI E I.ANI) DAMAfJEl).
with elevpn winter's snows, but thpi'" | T/' ^
were mark.- of potato parings* on the i tVailhilS l\01)e
floor, or nt lpn«t cppm^il a *
To Sium \cck
wctc Iiiairv.- I' ■'■mvw on tutunhoardfd floor, ur at least seemed to he. The Vosges have chanpetl j thiit little in the interveninj? years.
THEY'VE ({TIT TH \T
<H Pen Killer
I FPINAE, France, Sept. 2 H’DI— I. As the Aisne wa - the “hinjre" of oplerations in the main theater f war inn the'western front, o the V L r OS Ilnrmed the “hiiiRe" of Pan'; i i.di inVtn MSlice, which wa <„ Ibitiously with the c;iptuie . f Tliann lin the late summer of 10M and whi, a Jended in absolute deadh k in the nlosing days of 1D| _ Thel'eafti r te.e di p i lain ,f the ■Vo i t'd that part i j propei which had fallen to I\m > ■yed a. a lest sette r for the Kr-nth | pml later as a trainiiiK ground f.tr ■ thr e-fourths of the American di\i■ti11ii uhirh later v.ert to palti Bin tin 1 Saint Miluel and Anrona • if-
ift nsives.
1 Fighting in Ahace and on hi Ifiiuge of thy Vpspe. wa f ;i d jl- | lory character, i.nly po- lilt- v.l en Ivi nthei permitti d, and m \ i omployling artillery in a major sense. Due
Ito this, and th<
■victories were of a deci ive nature, ■ the damage was not great. I The city of Saint Die in the nor'h■eastern corner of the depart m?nt v.;is lliiolly shelled during the battle of that • name, but it stand- a- the ,.,d • n. it’ he even partially destroyed, f’ornipiont, l.a Dres-e, Gerarimer, t'n important railway center of Kemire [nont, Arches, Fpinal and Saulx i’i ill of them a .-tone’s throw from the [Alsatian border, virtually were left ntouched, and to the end of the war boe was not a mark on the little nothin hamlets of Kruth and O.iern cross the then German b irder. Further on into A!-ace, .Wctzo d ilittlach, Somlernach, Mulb; ■ h ..od funster were pretty w 11 shot up in be struggle for the Braunkopf, and Tiore to the south and in the legion jo 1 ' (iuebwillcr, Altkirch, Mulhou. e and fTliann, the damage was more noticeable in 1918, while i-olated mountain in the long Alsatian range—Hart nanswielerk ipf, the Ballon d‘AI ace he Schlutt, Hoehnack were the tar (gets of artillery thr ughout the war itecause of their tr r. :! n valu a.
rhservatlnn pest- 1 .
It is a pity, in a way th: o much {fighting took place here, cod ibat t ■■ town., few as the; were ii number, Were subjected to shellin ’. A rly ins tin -pring of Ittld, tb • Fr tv b were willing to admit that the «nmpaign of the First Aims i. .d been motivated by sentimental to.: n--, |aii(l that the , r )0,00p men who had pi r ished in taking and retaking Hart-ntaiL-wtelerkopf had been tin wn a way in battles of no tactical Im n.!-
tance whatever.
Nevertheless, the French con-id-er themselves fortunate that no more damage was done, and particularly that Gerardmer, the beautiful little resorst at the feet of the Sehlutt anti iloehneck, was not even scratch d. Under the circumstances, only 18,ootV of the 82,00(1 inhabitants of the Vosges felt obliged to quit their homes during HiU and Iyl5, and [records show that with the exception of those who sold out to their neighbor. all had returned by the time the Americans arrived in the sector. The statisticians were at some pains to I t 105 towns destroyed in the department and 129 others damaged—fig utes which American doughboys are permitted to doubt at will. Even the French figure of 1918 gave only 2,122 houses destroyed and 5,008 damaged, which would indicate an average of only twenty houses each for the towns destroyed. It is -ignificant to note that of 120,000 acres affected by the war, smly 4,500 aie listed arable, due to pbe fact that most of th" figh ing "as in the mountains here and iAcr land which had never been tilled and over which today cattle wandt i ih
search of forage.
To complete the pietur :582 factories were dismantled or destroyed 2,445 kilometres of highway and 20 kilometres of railway torn up. It iprobable that all of the 20 kiloino:re. of railway were between Metzeral and Munster, neither of which i in the wosges. The highways were not, are Dot and probably w m never be any lore famous than the rocky roads ^f the Arkan.-a- Ozark*, and hence »""'>t be considered much of a 1 is-, s for the factories, it is known that h" brench themselves destroyed -evrai when it wa, feared that the mans would take Saint Die and Mhaps Gerardmer, (' rnimont and Itrexxe, while it i s not un Ukely fi-it resident- of Gi rinan sympathies r n 'l ,hp y w •• r, ' ni.in, r ,ps) accounted
r the ris-t.
Obviously, Under tin circumstances \osges has quite re d. Which to say that it i s ijtt| P different '".‘‘•r "» » July J„ ( ° rN ‘ P"ndi* n t patiently P ' ,lato ''' in » little len ,)«<k on a kill beyond Raon-aux-Bois. | On an equally hot July day in 1980 • trudKed up the littb’ hill again. riou K " Whkh ^ rf> ^ rnvsJ, ° US nam " * ,| U| ni"'' bad faded
LORAIN, O., (UP) — police used to dump confiscated bottled liquor in Lake Erie off municipal pier hen-. They (io longer do that. Reason: Fishermen left Uleir tinhing, went swiming to retrieve the bottles. Tw thousand bottles ,,f |, ,. r were i c c■red one bi'2 'lay, it was repurtcil.
FEDl ilA). PRISONER At ILL Itp I I* f FXL't L I t'D SINt’F I. \\\ in 18!>0 W \S P XSSI Ii
( HIKKI. OKI FROM
I Feder..! P nitentiary, Lenvenw irth, iK.i.s., .Sir, r, (UP) — Showing eonj tempt ii iifo until the end, Carl jPaiurar, i.lu, proudly referred to bir.itself as "Da- mo.-t criminal man n
| till wav died on the gallow hci PIT!SBURGH, (UP) To uv ’ ; . i ”
paying l|25,000 foi one inch of lirul llan ved in Kansas in 40 years.
■jf an adjoining property on which Tin trip
he King Edward apartment ljuiltlir.g He " allegedly encroached, owners of tin-
The president may cr may not inter- to tel! of the 1V1 he got out of killing 1 fer with the sentence handed down by XV arnke, be c I didn’t get any Richard J. Hopkins, federal judge. I fun out of it, I i ot ))leasurp out of it, The state of Kansas cannot prevent I ill would la! dl of you if you will committed on the Federal ptisen give cie a gi'n , I,a, I hate ))(in))le; grounds. | 1 think they arc more bad than good, A'"flip of . coin” w ill decide who a d the more .t i, kille ! the let-
the actual executioner will be just ; ter.”
few minutes before Panzran starts* Ice eomm. c* repotted that no for the execution chamber, Don Me-! subject evei icI qinstions |iul Ivor, U. S. mar. hall in charge of the [to thorn more i. dl> than this outi xecution, said. Three applications law from civilizaia.ii mul while he was have been made for the job and the unbalanced, he wa- put crazy in the
was. (irung at G:0! d dead at (i:29 a. m.
coin flip means $100 to the man who wins. It was necessan to I " ib! g:d-
bm fo : the hanging.
Panzran who wa.- ordered to rfp
to the deput- warden fo. imia ;icn. of a n i-.-I I rp .i i in. bar
I and killed AXuroke “iii ca.
the first man I saw. ’ Since tin i: be a.in. “outlaw of society,” believes “in iv I human should be exti "minuted,”
-.i nsc that he da: not kin w right from
wrong.
‘“I know 1 am p q crazy”, Panzmii said alt. i iie.iring the ileeision. •| do nothing witb.iut a teason and I lo ant act fiom emotions.” He th. n told Uiat he was sent to a n formatory whe 11 years olil nnq i.as treated badly. It wa- here that he began hi icln-ll'on and started out
— ■-- ^ ^ troii-, the petition set out. Reason assigned for the request was that a decreased rate would iui tg about increased use of ga . arnone the chi- .iny’s consumers. Fxi.-itimr rat- !-, are discriminator;, in favo of a mall class of useis, the petitio set out, and a v-adjustment for thi class w.i- asked. An i icm-p totaling about $8(t.i year would result for tin lin.iti ! class Prop . . ii rates are for the fii " HOO j cubic feet. $t.‘2o a mouth; I i ti. next 2,700 feet, *1,20 a month; fo tli > next d.dOO cubic le-t. dtl co: t: month and for each ‘J.c.ut) c . , ov.-i tb ,t, 10 cents a mi.nth.
-; \ IT Itll \Y \T I MF S I X I F l XIIt
apartineqt hud workmen chi-H from four io five inche from the mitsid of the wall of the seven-story Iruc-
turo.
BOY x GOOD KNITTER
Fkl!Ki:/.
AViWfoi;
The rst 1 cf Fan : was bannci
boasts of killing 28 of his follow nnui I to committ evci> kind of “crime,” h
■ i- N’l i F .x I IA LX LI . mil definitely avow ed U “\ uH
PITTSBURGH, Pa. (UP) — Three months that Joe VVehner, 11, has spent in a hospital may slow him up
on the baseball diamond but he has j prison . , h - added a useful art to his accomplish- 20, 192!).
ment. while recovering from a crushed leg. Joe has learned to sew and knit and has lieenme so proficient he now surpasses his four sisters in wielding
a needle.
'll, Kns., Sept. . U'P) — .! exccutior in the state inco capital punishment in 1890 will take place
iW'ithin the 1 ■ T-.d States Penitentiary I here when (:•:! Panzian, self-styled | "bad ni.': 1 " :. .d “enemy of ninnkinil”, pays with In life on the gallows September i fii .:.;riler of I!. G. Warlike
uperintendenl, June
The i, ]y i leniency that is left to ave Panzran from the gallows anil which will pri a-rve the leputatiou of Kansu, le with President Hoover, the execution liccau.-e ttic murder wa-
said.
“Society has me to thank and hould Iniilil n great monument to mo because 1 have not propagated my kind,' Panzian said after his .-entmei wa-
pronounced.
ergdicate all human life if ld« rated.' When the court appointed an attorney to defend him, Panzran shouted, i "I don’t want that! 1 have told you what to do with me and I am .satis-
fied with the gallows.”
“X’ou want to do something fi r me 1 Panzran asked when his attorney whom he once threatened to kil! during his trial, insisted upon h (pin;'.
him. Weil, then go over to the v i - by the Central State Ga Company dow and take a no . dive and knock in a petition filed with the public si r
your biuins out on the puv. nuni." vie commis-ion.
His attprne.\ demanded a , tv q ho i du tiio , if unproved, will commission to question * izian. me in a dcciea of $15,000 annually XX hen the commission a.-ko., P:.n::ran ip (hi’ cost of ga for X incenne
Aviation and auto race Day. Curti -Wright aerial pageant >>t progr, in front of grandstand. Aut i races on mile track. P. O. S. af A. Band of Crawford.—
villc.
Saturday, thi' closing <lay of the ^Klh .ate fair at Indianapolis will
PROPOSES LOW FR (■ \S I he Sp, ■ d Day, and the two most m d BATES l \ VINCENNES rn of peed demon-, the airplam A voluntary reduction in gas rates and the uutomoliile, will be kings of n Vincennes wv ; proposed Thursday | the da\ . This is the most exceptio.ihl
program the state fair has ever had on it. cl sing day and thousand's of visitors, including many who have already attended the fail, are ex-
pected to he present.
Fair ' tfieials have hope, of a new
pa- |
attendance record for the week. The decrease the first part of the fair causi’d by wet weather has been over* ■ oni t :i large extent by tlw vast ciow ’Is of the past three days and a big Saturday crowd might crack the pi i nt record of 254,587, e-tablished
in I929.
Tin headliner of the Curtiss- \\ i i;ht aerial exhibition team, which will bring a squadron of 15 stunting pianos to the fair, is Dale “Red” i nk n, co-holder of the world’s en- ] duranc" flying record. He will bring hi two famous planes, the “Greater St. I,ni!.-” with which he and O’Brne n.iiiUy -it a world’s record, and ib ■ >ld St. Louis Rubin which estab- . Psl . .I tin list endurance mark about a \ ir ago. Mrs. Jackson wiil accompany him. bamous flyer- that tire luted to be at the fait include “Oi size’’ Osborne. < \ Case, Cy Y, unglove, Clarence Mi Klroy and other stunt artists. Evi\ tunt known in nirdom will lie tiled during the program. Virginia Wittle-y, of Milwaukee, :i stunt aviitiix, will do her tricks. “Red” Robinson will give a refueling exhibition with tin endurance record plane. The auto race program includes three events, two five mile dashes and one 10-mile race. A state fair championship triph.N and $500 iu purses will lie aw riled. Twenty daring pilot* will wh el their 1 ttle racing creations to the tailing line at 2:80 p. m. Bennie Ben liel, .-XI Thiesun and Herman Gauss are three of the h ailing racing artist, who are enten d.
Emphasizing Thriily Furniture Values In Every Depar!
New tilings have been arriving daily from the last Furniture Market, and they offer some aurprialiigly thrifty values In Inmn i\miisbiip*s. In style and in quality we have never shown anything finer. Manufacturer have done their utumn in th. dev bqinient cf correctly styled furnishings at unusually low eort. PRICES HERE HAVE BEEN Ann ISTED TO 1914 LEVELS Furniture prices In this Store are tactually nt 1911 levels. L you v.ai eamo in and nuiko careful conuiarison, you will see that there are worthwhilii savings for you throughout our stock. Xoti can readily till rd ti"\\ furr.l btn," for your bom" at the-.* low prices. Prices limited uie fur cash i.,.l.,:i ii i ... | ndeii payments, -lightly additional.
Luxurious Overstuffed Jacquard Suits
$80.35
Manufactured of excellent mnteral, with well made construction and fully guaranteed spring work, these prices are unusual values at '^e low price quoled. The covering Is of beautiful Jacquard velour. In Taupe, Tan and blue, and we can supply the same design In other covers If you desire.
WHERE WH L YOU EQUAL THIS?
ine Angora Mohair ^ Davenport and Chair ^
Genuine Angora Mohair
Tliese larger oml luxurious ii|ibiilstcrrd pieces embody the llnest upholstering construction known They urc ■ .ured m genuini Angora yiirn M.iiiair, it guaranteed quallt' It Is an unusual value, iind one that you should see.
9x12 FELT BASE RUGS $5.95 9x12 Heavy Axminster Rugs $21.55 This rug value Is unusual. We have never before In our history been able lo offer a rug of this quality at this low price. We Invite your investigation, bocnti e you will find that It will save you considerable money in lin purchase. Our whole stocks are equally attractive in line floor covering values.
IPF"':: i—I t /
Earlv American 3-piece Dining Room
384.69
Tins une i- lalthflllly illusi l"d above, and consists of a largo buffet, e-.t nsion table, live uie ■ h ra, and one ho i hatr, in combination wain it til ol d surfaces are of beautiful walnut, linislied h. lacquer. It i a beuutUul suite, and one that you will admire.
Genuine He osier Sfep Saver .. And now you can receive lloosler quality, lion! hr cotivi nlcuce. and the beauty cf lloosler ttulsli at ih 1 low price quoted iiliovo. There I no reason for you to In* without a lloosler kitchen cabinet longer, when you have an opportunity to se urc it nt this low i a. Ccc?/ir,*ic:l fS." $13.50 This util uTiv ■ (I"1 . : l' laid? is made iviib a Viunt urst tup. emlmdyir.g the use of many woods to n k tlu design. It is durably finlelic I in lacquer, and Is styled to be a di Tiu live occasional piece. 26x540«J AC A.xiii.'nsteri 'd' (To Ty woven and heavy Axminster ovals in si::' that will lit in almost anywhere, are quoti t at very attractive pVices. Thcve are m.iny p'ttcrus for you in .ae in orr i '.in k now. Stylish Wal L'immonc & ^ Bed .... This is a heavy, two-lncli post walnut finished lad made by Siinmona, In an up; aling ilc li-n Fi her full Ize or twin si".f r»t f lit • ’ • • •
9x12 Jacquard Woven Genuine Wiltons
$69.65
In searching the Market over, we were unable to find a better Wilton value than this one. It Is made by tho manufacturer* of the famous Gullstan rug. anil offers the unusual wearing qinlin that only Wiltons embody, at a very popular prb i There are man' ib* Igus to see in our Store.
Occasional
This lovely occasim^il chair w-ill beautify some spot In your living room Just as you want It to. It is upholstered In fine Jacquard velour, and is very durably made, with web bottom sag seat. I lie price Is unusually attractive.
$23
Comfortable Simmons Inner Spring Mattress This Is a fully guaranteed inner-spring mattress made by Simmons, and offers you unusual comfqrt and restfulnesa. The low price brings It well within the cost of un ordinary mattress. Let ns show
It to you today.
Come to our Store any time; your leisure; see the many new irriving now for Fall.
look through at thinra Unit $rt
Charming Four Poster CiiCQ C Bedroom Suite tP©I/< 00 This three-piece suite consists of a large Vanity di es ter. with French plate mirror, poster bed and commodious ( best. IMecei are beautifully made of figured walnut and selected hard wood, and overlaid with decorations of carved maple Construction Is of the very best. We urge you to see this excellent value.
HORACE LINK & COMPANY
“The Store of Furniture”
