The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 April 1933 — Page 2
tSE DAILY BANNER, GREENCA3TLE, INDIANA, IUESDaY, APRIL 4. Iii33.
Kflief Job Boss
,1 .astral trial Mr. Conway said THE DAILY BANNER
he believ?(l the verdict was based f principally on the Aurand incident.
CONTEST PICKINC. UP
The ^aBoline dert>y l ^ le ^ ^
* bevroUt Mjt i ''P
And
i Herald,Consolidated
“It Waves For All”
Major United States l-ori-1 Service, ...... will be in charge of the unemployed army of 2o0,000 which President Hoosevelt expects to put to wort; on bis reforestation program in the near future. Plan* are being made to establish work camps in hundreds of localities to take care of lb deTnnds for work.
MUNCIE PASTOR A<QI IT TED Ml ASS \ I I. I ( HAKUE
MUNCIE. Ind., April 4—The Rev. (1 Lemuel Conway, suspended pastor of the Madison Street Methodist Episcopal church here, was acquitted by a circuit court jury last night of a charge of attempting to assault Miss Helen Huffman, 18-year-old Sunday school teacher, during an automobile ride last Dec. 29. The jury of 19 farmer^, a salesman and a school teacher reached its verdict after a little more than two hours’ deliberation, but went to dinner while Judge L. A. (iuthrie wncalled back to receive its report. The verdict, clearing the fil-yar-old minister of one of two crimi ml charges brought against him. was read at 6:5r> p. m. He still faces a charge of assault and battery contained in an indictment which id leges lie knocked W '• lard Aurand, choir master at the church, over the chancel rail at Sunday evening -ervires la t January Aurand lias denied he v.a active in pressing the Hoffman girl's charge'-, against the minister. The Rev Mr. Conway wa suspended from hi paste rate f >r a year by a church jury a few weeks ago which convicted tiiiii nf imprudent mini terial conduct. At tihe conciusioi of bis
d toda\ Boinarl Handy was
out ip front in tl.e mileage c intent 1 with fm mile pfr gallon. His flag is |
... 1 .1 Of Bl *<-'V
IL rl.o, t is in . I pla ‘ F' iHi Aii
piles and others ai. not far behind. Mi. H Howell announced today that
the contest will start at 9:30 tomor - row instead of in the afternoon and
ail are invited to take part.
SUITS DISMISSED
Suit of Dennis McCammack • -.ajust Fkirir, McCammack. to recover uc!ia:c money, has been dismissed
in circuit court.
Another suit dis-missr 1 was that of ( !\de Hoff a against Hilbert Christen horry, a replevin action One venued case, that of Carl D. Hoadley again t Harry Gray and ,,tlier , < n a note and for foreclosui-e of a mortgage, brought here from Hendricks county, also wa^ dismissed on a motion by the plaintiff. 'i he damage complaint of Alenc Alexander against tlie M cr Transit | Management Co., flreyhoun I I ines, ! was -et dowui for trial June 12. This case was venued here from Owen
county.
MOUSE SHORTED U \DIO ANDERSON. Ind.. (UP) Radio experts called in to correct the trouble in Mrs. Ruth Pickett’s radio here ound that a inou.-e had become en.angled in the wiring, strangling itself in death an.l creating a hor’. cir-
cuit.
Entered in the poetoffice at Greeneast le, Indiana, at second class mail matter under Act of March 8. 1878. Subscription price, 10 cents per week; $3.00 per year by mail in Putnam County; $.7.50 to $500 per year by mail outside Putnam County.
The official board of the Christian church will meet Wednesday evening at 7:30 o’clock at the cljurch. | City marshal Otto 0. Dobbs was j confined to his home by iilnes Tuesday. I. W. Hudlin w’as acting as
marshal irr his absence.
Mrs. Kathryn Stuart nf thD city
‘•Orit FATHERS HAVE TOI.D US" (Read Psalm 78:1-0) We need much more than the background 0 of our own brief paste t<. understand God’s ways. We need in Ijm.n to what our fathers have told ur. They will share their experience v ith us both to control and to com foil us. Their voices are the rehearsal of the goodness of God. We see I lings oil out of proportion without the teaching nf the past. We mak'too much of what our generation ha* done; the - nice* of the pa*t w ill ke.-p us humble, we make too much of our present difficulties; the ' oices of the past will give us courage. The Psalmist in this great song rehearses the p .'d of his people to sustain the pres,i«t and hearten the future. When we, too, have teiiearsed the goodness of God in the life of our nation, we shall face the future unafraid. Prayer: O Thou Who dost speak to u. through the brave and strong of (lie finished years, may we hear their voices as we face the challenge of our unfinished years. Forgive us all oui slowness in listening to what our f it hers have told us. Make us sensi live to their instruction and may we, recalling the past of our nation as the record cf Thy goodness and power, take heart for what awaits sure Thou wilt not fail us. Amen.
Hitfh Blood Pressure ({nick Relief, or You Only Pay When Satisfied If you suffer from High Blond pressure, dizziness, ringing in the ears, can’t sleep at nights, feel weak and shaky, bad taste, nervous. If your heart pounds and you fear a paralytic stroke, to demonstrate the value of Dr. Hayes’ successful prescription we will send you postpaid, a regular $1 treatment on absolutely FREE TRIAL. While it is non-specific, many cases report remarkably quick relief; often symptoms diminish and quiet normal sleep returns within .3 days Contains no salts, physics, opiates or dope. Absolutely harmless. You can continue with treatment you are takI ing It cannot conflict. Perfectly safe with any diet PAY NOTHING UNLESS GREATLY IMPROVED. Then -end $1. If not your record cancels ; the charge. Write to Dr. Hayes Ass’n ' 21 Hi Coates House, Kansas City, Mo
8°SJ
W. F. VI. Society To Meet Wednesday The W Oman's Foreign
Mi.-sio iary
, n , “ : n " u ; n °Y V ; 1 society of the Methodist Episcopal I and Donald Kitts of Langh; „.;n U/ednesdac aftei
Va., v.'eie marri. d at Craw f .rdsville.
CHiCHOTiPS Br*a«l Pllltia Ucd an i imetiHic boxes, seaic.i with Cl . Ribbon. Tnkn donlficr* baj V ? f nl°TBVsMVHK KioxB IIK»NI> Pll.l.<*.( .40 .--.likooya lletl. S.f-l. Rfllil.it Uul '“iJ«01D IV DIUCGIS1I SVESKlkW'**
VKRDN TOST AT SEt
Q-U-I-CK
L
i cliurch will meet Wednesday after noon at 2.30 o'clock in Keystone
They will make their home in gii.ia, Mrs. Kitts is the daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Ora Todd.
|
Suit to collect an alleged unpaid i note end to set aside a conveyance of 1 real estate, was filed in circuit court Tuesday by John C. Wilson and Tar ney P. Wilson, of the. firm nf Wilson & Son, against Mary W. 1 Myden, Raymond H. Donehew, Grace Donehew, and Hay D. Grimes, administrator of tiio estate nf .lame A. Di v den The plaintiffs chaip. that a
note of $304 executed to them by I during the social hour
(rnntlnliril From I'nge Mnel
will ^ abandoned hope for the rescue of
William A Moffett
' Y | chapel. The Mary Slessor group
| haw charge of the meeting with Mr?. | Re3i Admiral . R. A Ogg as leader. nnd the other missing officers and
+ + + + + + + men from the dirigible Akron.
w .. „ . ! With only three survivors, the Mrs. Mathes Hostesh ” , . . r cj tt.p
I death list would number 73 or <4. ijje
Matl.es entertained the greatest number ever lost in a li.ig-
Monday Club April 3 with Mrs. Alonzo Arnold in charge of the program gave a very timely talk on gardens, flowers ami vegetable . Answers to rcll call w’ere, "Garden Mild3," Dainty refreshment- were served
Mary W. Dtyden and James A. Dryden is unpail and that Mary W. Dry Hen recently conveyed 40 acre- of real esC.te to the Donehews and ha.? no other assets out of which the note can bo paid. Tlie plaintiffs demand a judgment of $500 on the note and tint tlie real estate conveyance be set aside and the real estate made subject to payment of the plaintiffs claim. Andrew E. Durham and Charles McGaughey aie attorneys for
Die plaintiff.
DR. \\. F. MOORE TO SPEAK BEFORE MEN’S FORUM
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PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS I e^ter Sudranskj of Pendleton spent Tuesday here visiting- relatives. Greencastle chapter No. 255 O. E. S. will meet in regular session Wednesday at 8 o’clock. Mrs. Arthur Walker, Grown street underwent a major operation at the county hospital Monday. Miss Jea-i Murphy of Crawfordsville was the week end guest of her uncle, Matt Murphy of this city. C. C. Heustis. of Greencastle, who formerly hail business interests in Brazil, was a visitor here today. — Brazil Times. Mrs. Dove Hedge of Reelsville entered the Clay County hospital Sun day and underwent a goiter operatim Monday morning There will lie a temperance meetI ing at the Somerset church, April 9. . Ralph Clevenger will speak. A quartet from Bainhridge will sing. Modern Woodmen of America will meet in the J. O. Cammack studio I Wednesday evening at 7:39 o’clock to elec*, delegate* to the state encamp-
ment.
Mrs. Walter Re-ves i suffering from shock, bruises and a severe scalp wound suffered when lie fell down dairway at her horn,- northeast of the j city Saturday night. Marie Gent l.on-y, who ha- been an inmate of tlie county farm, was taken to tlie Sta'e Village for Epileptic , at Newcastle Tuesday by deputy Sheriff Edward Kiteljorge. She was eominfti ted to the Village by .fudge V/ilbpr S.
i Donner
I * - Ben Riley ha: received word fro-)' ■ his son, Williajj. that he is now con1 nected with th A office of the Foto- ' Fitch, Inc., lithographers at Cincinnati, O Mr. Riley write* that ho i? well pleased with hi- w< rk and has an opportunity for advancement. Calvin Griffith, Owen county agricultural agent, was reelected to that position for a period of one year, at a meeting of the Owen County hoard of Education Monday morning in th,-> office of the County Superintendent of Schools. Rev. W. F. Gill of Greencastle will conduct funeral services at the Danville Baptist church Wednesday after noon at 2 o’clock for Mrs. Mary E 'Thomas, pioneer Indiana resident and widow of Rev. Eramus D. Thomas, for many year? pestor of the Big Run Baptist church. Mrs. Thomas i died at the home of a daughter. Mr A. C Pebworth, in Indianapolis. Bur j ial will be at Danville. While working with a sliort wave attachment for a radio receiving set Dec 22, James McCurdy, of Brazil,
Dr. W E. Moore of Bloomington Indiana i- to be tlie g-uest speaker of the Men’s Forum of the First Christian Church at the regular monthly dinner meeting of this organization Thursday evening at six thirty o’clock in the dinner room of the First Christ-
ian Church.
Dr. Moore is the popular minister of the First Christian Church of Bloomington, Indiana. This church is very near the campus of Indiana university aid is largely attended by the student
and university group He is in large demand as a Rotary and Kiwanis speaker. Dr. Moore studied in 'Transylvania University and other school of the South, he wa. with the Sherwood Eddy Euro|»ean Seminar one summer, and is u critic of mo lorn social movements 'Hie subject of hi address will lie "Current- in the Main Stream of Life.” A quartet composed of Marshall Abrams, Charle- Hamilton, .Paul Brown and John Orowl will furnish special music. There will lie group -inging led by Charles Hamilton R. P. Mullins, president of tlie Eorum stated that a brief husine. * -ession would precede the regulai pro gram- Tie further stated 'that all members should note the rhunge in time from Wednesday to Thursday evening. Paul Bo-ton. chairman of the program committee, will introduce the guest speaker The dinner eorrmiltee consists of Cloyd Trisler. William Blackwell. WiT mer Alhin, George W Buiefiel, A’n-an U. Moore. 'Hie attendance committee consists of Erne t Trout, Roy Abrams J. W. Herod, Charles Rector, Ira Cowling, Wallace A I ong. Vernon Sniiler, B. F Handy. B A. Daggy. The program committee consists of Paul Boston. Dr. W R. Hutcheson, Marshall Abrams, John Boyd, W. L. Denman, Everett I.ong, Charle.- McGaughoj Raymond Erwin. Robert T. Beck
$3.00
Round trip to
CINCINNATI
Saturday, April 8
caught a regular program broadcast | All Opportunity Trt Visil from Vienna, Austria. Mr McCurdy rp^ (1nc i nnat j
Lgion Terminal
Return Limit April 9. (oachea only. Full particulars at Big lour Station BIG FOUR ROUTE
*f« ef* *I« d* Country Reading ( luh To Meet Thursday The Country Reading eluli will meet Thursday afternoon at 2 o’clock with Mrs. Fred Thompson. Response? lo roll call will be my favorite radio program. Mrs. Daniel Hutcheson will give a hook review on "Russia My Home'’ •E 4* + + + + Kehckah District Meeting At Ladoga Rebekah Lodges of Montgomery, Hendricks. Morgan and Putnam cou ities will hold their spring meeting, Thursday. April lith a* 2:30 p. n. with Friendship Lodge No. 53 at Ladoga. Mrs. Olive A. Brown, district deputy president will preside Other Slate officers will he present. The school of instruction will be un ler the leadership of Mrs. Revah Pressler. Crown Point, Ind.. Rebekah as-embly presi-
dent.
Lodges of Montgomery and Hendricks county take part in the program. The degree wall be exemplified at the evening meeting by a te i memlier staff of Colfax in District No. 9. This tableau work is beautiful. The staff is new to Putnam county, so it will be interesting to all who can go. Rebekas in gor.d -landing are i .itcd to this meeting + + •!• + + + Burning Musical'? To Meet M ednesday The Wednesday Morn: :g Musical? will meet with Miss Ed a Bowie . at tlie Cole apaitmem cu East Wa iington street, al 10 o'clock *!• •!• -I- 0Mrs. McGaughey Hostess To Fortnightly Club The regular meeting of the Fortnightly dub was held Monday evening at the home of Mrs. W M. Me(iaufhey, with Mrs. Thad Jom ■ a. i sistant hostess. During the business meeting the following officers were elected: president Mrs. Janies Bittles; vie- president. Mrs. C. ('. Gillen; ocretary, Mis. Ferd Lucas; treasurer, Mrs. Thad Jones and council member, Mr . Fred Thompson. Mrs. Benton Curtis had charge of tlie program on the ...abject "Holy Prayers in a Horses Ear " During the social hour light refreshments were served. »|« »!• »j« »j« «j* Mrs. Bro'Jiers Hostess To Priscilla Club The regular meeting of the Modern Pri-cUla dub was held Monday afternoon <tt the-home of Mr- A. A. Brothers, ijiovist street The,afternoon was spent in sewing for th* county ho..pitul. •j« *!« •!« »|« t elehrated Birthday Anniversary Today Mrs. George R. Shepiierd celehrated her 82n I birthday anniversary at her liom? at 12 Larabee street on 'Lie •
day.
Miss Hazel Ash remain critically ill at her home north of town. Ilancel Grimes filed suit in circuit court Tuesday against Heiman Hendricks for damages of $33.50 alleged due for violation of a contract The plaintiff charees that he sub-leaned 45 acres of grounl to the defendant in 1932 with the understanding that the defendant was to place one half of the com rrop raised on the ground in the plaintiff’s crib near Grccnastle. The plaintiff chargi-- the defendant shucked his half of the corn and left the plaintiff’s in Hit> fi.-ld, making it necessary for the plaintiff to employ workmen to shuck his share at a cost of $33.60. M. I). Abtane- is attorney for the plaintiff.
ihle accident.
The navy department added the name of Lieut. Robert E- Sayre of Elgin, HI., to the list of those aboard tlie Akron when it left I^ikehurri, NJ., last night. Sayre, attached to the Lakehurst station, was a passenger and brought the number aboard the
Akion to 77.
$20
to
$300
o A N S
On Furniture Automobiles Live Stock Etc.
payment terms w i.i.km or MONTHLY. Remember We Nerii, Terre Haute, Paris, Marshall, Br ., zil and Greencastle. INDIANA LOAN CO. 24 Vj E- M ash. Phone 15
ATLANTIC CITY, April 4, <UP)The world’s biggest airship. IT. S. S.
Akron, crashed in flames in stormy j ftn( ,
darkness off the New Jersey roast early today, hurling into the water nffirei s and crew of 77 men of
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her
73 are dead or still missing.
the fate of Rear Admiral
\V. A. Moffet and other distingui-hed
passengers remained in doubt.
While ships and planes converg. i upon the place at sea where wreck
T h" mighty aircraft apparently .: , c the Akron floated, relief w,,rklictioi of lightning and a swift than gatheied heie to receive sunii
w ho could lie sped ashore
der storm-caught fire as it fell to:
tlie water. j
A few hours after the Akron t (|F
crashed, a gray fleet of -teel-dad , .SERVICES AT M. E. CHURt II
warships and powerful airplanes rii-
cl"d slowly through dense fog from knew all men and tequiicd no Barnegat beach to Atlantic (it/, p V j,j Bn( . 0 from anyone abort human
searching for survivors. I na ture.” John 2:25. They found four men who lived; "While men have been absorbed in
through the collapse ot tlie huge questions of ‘How shall I think framework and envelope of the craft | of Hn(l . How ^hal, l think of in which Rear Admiral William A. jp SU g ( * theie is a third question ,,l no Moffett had been a distinguished pas- significance and that is ‘How
wrote to the tat ion, UOK2 for verification, whirli he received la t week in the form of a souvenir folder showeenes of Vienna. The station uses a crystal controlled experimental transmitter with a power of twenty watts
on the aerial.
i
Announcement! I have purchased Sweet’* Grocery at 90.3 S* Indiana and will appreciate the patronage of new aeul old customer*. Fruit.s, Vegetables Meats • Chester Wells PHONE DBUVEHY
spnftpv on a projected New England
cruise.
One of the four picked up by the first vessel to flash word of the disaster—the German tanker Phoebus— was chief radio man Robert W. Copelaud, who had survived the crash of t io IT. S. S. Shanandnah in 1925. He died on the Phoebus. Li?ut. Commander H. V. Wiley, Seaman Carl C. Jleans and Seaman Moody Erwin also were picked up by the Phoebus and put aboard the i!e troyev Fucker, which was due in New York about noon. Copeland’s body also was aboard. The rescue fleet, feeling its way thiough rain, a high rolling sea and thick fog, was almost helpless a* lawn broke through the cloud bank? and, later, the thick haze closed down still further to repel the searching airplanes. A dozen naval ghips, headed by the new cruiser Portland with ( apt. Euirf:.x Loaiy m command of the rescue fleet, steamed slowly around the .-eerie of the disaster. Hut their s ar. b wa? dilficult. Only small piece of wreckage had been found by late morning, coast guard officials announced, and the men of the Akron had vanished save for the four plucked from the wreckage by the tossing German tanker. k fleet of land and seaplanes, roaring out from bases at Philadelphia, Lukehurst and elsewhere, hummed ov r the water, swinging low to peer ihrough the fog in a tireless search of the waves. Private craft, carrying newspapermen and photographers, raced past tin* sturdy naval craft, which set a slow pace a? they swerved back and forth some 20 to 30 miles off the fou t, where the Akron was first reported down not far from Barnegat. A strong swell was miming, and the wieckage was reported drifting rapidly towaid shore, at a point prob ably south of Atlantic City. Rescue vessels included the Portland, the Tucker, the destroyers McDougal, and Cole, the tanker Phoebus, the cutter Mojave, the naval tug Skagamore, three coant power boat*, cne New York patiol boat anil many smaller craft Many airplanes participated. For miles along the shore emergency preparations were mad • to care for any survivors. Ambulance plane? were held in readiness, doctors and nurses were summoned to stand by and were kept moving dowm the coast as closely as possible in conformity with the meager reports of drifting wreckage. ST. NA7.AIRE, France, April 4, (UP)—The French naval dirigible F.-9 crashed and was destroyed at the village of Duermande while on a trial flight from the Rochefort naval ba«e today. Two of the crew of twelve were injured. Tlie dirigible was valued at 4,000,(100 francs. BARNEGAT CITY, N J., April 4, (UP)—The Akron, giant pride of the navy’s air force, crashed at sea 20 n ile? from here during the night, and a misty dawn found ships and .lirrtail from u dozen ports gatherimr for the rescue. Hour, after the first meager radio 'ii--patches from the German tanker PhoebuE spread word that the Akron was down at sea, only four of the 77 men aboard were known to have been
shall I think of man?’” said tlie |{e\ Albert E. Monger in the first of a series of pre-Easter sermons at the Greencastle Methodist church Mm Jay evening o’i the general theme of "Re thinking Jesus for Our Day " Prof Van Denman Thompson was at the organ and Mrs Doctliy Locke Eleet wood sang a solo. "Man has had to return again and again to the Jesus of history?. Five men write intimately about the .v;n he lived and what he had t" a- to moil. If we seek him not only athmlogy and .dogma havi t'vplaiiied and defined him for their age hat swe would seek to know any gn at historical character wa* wool I discover how timeless and eternal are hi spirit, example and teaching “While the world today is a vastly different world from the one in which Jesus lived, yet we di-cov* 1 that this human personality ha- ligh* to throw upon our human pnblc.n today. The problems with win h wa iite concerned are not different loan they wete in Jesus own day w• an still asking ‘How can men live together,’ 'How can they achieve nal happiness’ and ‘How can men overcome selfishness, greed, pettim <" vindictiveness.’ Mb* despair ot • n and their possibility of change jnst iis tlie most religion? thinkei of Jems despaired. There wen men then that thought of man a- they thought of a .-heep, just as there are men today who thank of men a ma chines. Nature of man cannot be changed, declare multitude? today, even as they did in Jesus day. "We need to return to the g I'd 3 today .for our undeistanding of b . an*l his answer ‘How shall w. ilini. of man?’ There we will see him in his own age and what a man ought to he tmd can be. We -ee in I* nman at his highest and be t, a .al len/e to men of every age to he wha* He was and ?till is. In Him. what man is expected to he nine by Hie cieative mind of this univeise "Lust summer in my gaiden there was one zinnia plant that had a more perfect blossom, more attractive in color and form than all the other: The creative power of nature had done something for this plant that was not done for any other of the handteds in the garden. 1 marked it and saved its seed with the expectation that this season I shall have in stead of one many like it. f* 0 Jesus, God has given to the world " n ’‘ man, that has become a new pattern for nl| men- Jesus shows ns th.v human nature can he changed when a man takes God seriously. He ha? shown us that men ran live differently than human nature linked to the past really lives. ’'What we think of man depend upon what we think of Jesus. It •' this that will have a large part in oui detetmination to change our own per sonal lives and the way we live in our relationships with other nu'ii. Jesus is a new pattern of n man whom the eternal creative spirit " the univent? commands us to foll" w The subject tonight will he "•h' 311 ' —Wishful Thinking." The member* of the Young Married Women’s b 1 ^’ cb.ss of the Sunday .school will "t tend the services in a group. Wednesday night the members of idu’ man’s League will attend. These ?ervices will be held from 7:30 to 8:30 each evening this week except Satur-
day.
