The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 August 1933 — Page 2
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THE DAfLY BANNER. CREENCASTLE. INDIANA. ILESDAY. AUGUST I. 1933.
< F. I RSCHEL' j \ IS RELEASED in KIDNAPERS
i>fcPART.MFNI OF JI STH K MEN (. i.AIM TO KNOW IDENTITY OF ABDUCTORS i
faiuily viaited with Mr aikl Mrs. I
GcorifP White Sui*■ !ay
Lowell McCamnnick and family I spent Sunday with Henry Anderson |
and wife v
.Mrs. Bertha Terry f-isited her sis- ; ter Mrs Nora Hill at Muncie Sunday, i Mr. and Mrs. Hamior Wallace I called on Ernest and Viola McCam- j
mack We inesday aftern<»>n.
Johnnie Ogles threshed oats for Ray Larkin Monday afternoonThe condition of Frances Humphrey who has been sick the past four
weeks is much improved.
Gail Morris and family visited with
Wallace Parker has been visiting with Mr ani Mrs Ray Larkin the
past week
OKLAHOMA CITY, Aug. 1. (UPf — Wic. offi-ial activity held in abey-^ ante eig t hours at the behest of the family «.f Charles F. Urschel, return- ;
el near midnight from nine days in Morris mother Monday,
tne oi.d.. u( kidnapers, authorities ?x»vitei! to open an unlimited offensive today on suspects in the case. “We .ue not g. ing to move until l t e family advise-,” raH R. H ^ C-Ivin i'-i f ■•{ the lo:al iepartment |
of justice bureau.
In announcing the -:.fe return of 1 the oil millionaire, ids brother-in-law, Arthur seel. n. indicated an agree-T-.ent .vas made to allow the kidnapers eight GUI# of immunity from
pursuit.
It is known that ousperts in the case are Bob Brady. Harvey Bailey. Wilbui Undeihill and associates, all ccnvicteu murderers and bank robbers whj e.-raped Memorial day from the Kansas state penitentiary. Certain official activity heie during Urs hei’s captivity indicated these
IF IE DAILY BANNER . And / Herald Consolidated f "It Waves For AllEntered in the postoffice at Green0 astle, Indiana, as second class mail a latter under Act of March 8, 1878. Subscription price, 10 cents per u eek; $3 00 per year by mail in Put1 rm County; $3 50 to $5.00 per year a mail outside Putnam County. PERSONAL AND I LOCAL NEWS
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CASTLE CAFE WEDNESDAY NOON Baked Chicken with DRESSING Freab Peach Cobbler with Whippod Cream
Capons Leader “Put On Spot
8°2!0y IV7
MA< HIM. GUNS KOAK IN < H ERG Country Heading ( lub
TONY M ARINO PAYS GANG-
STERS PENALTY
Mrs. George Frank is reported ill it her home near Clinton FallsMrs Ora Z. Browning of Indianapolis was a visitor here Tuesday. Mrs. W\ K Bartlett of Kentland is spending the week wjth her father,
J. R. Cox.
|j Miss Janet Flint of Oonnersville is tiROVELaND LODGE OF MASONS), the guest of Miss Margaret and GerALLOWF.D DAMAGES ..liine Coffman, north of torwn.
The Moose lodge will meet in reg-u!:-r session Wednesday evening at 8 n'cl ck. All members are urged to
\ppraisers File \, Their Reports
OF $1,750
Appraisers appointed in circuit
court to fix damages for property I , )resent
condemned by the state at the interection of L'. S highway 36 in Groveiand, filed their reports in circuit
court Tuesday.
In the suit against Harry J. Elliott
Miss Sarah Jane Durham, E Sem-
To Meet Thursday The Country Reading club will meet Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock with Mrs E- P- Hauck. The program will be in charge of Mrs
Arthur Richie- ++++++
Mrs. L. H. Pitchford of this city, Mrs. Walter Wright and Mrs. Katie Bastain, both of Fillmore, spent Tuesday at Bar.le Ground. Mrs. Rosella Luce, Mrs. Hildred Atterbury and daughters. Rosella and Geraldine, of Loveland, Colorado are gue-ts of Mr. and Mrs. J. A> Dietrich
east of town.
Miss Gertruo- Herod, daughter of ; a & e acros - s the street sfrora the Cicero Mr. and Mrs. John W Herod, has en- P ublic welfare station, tered Central Business college at In- Cicero police said they had learned iianapclis whe.e she will take a sec- fr, ’ m underworld sources that Marino ■ otarial course 'paid the penalty of a double crossing
1 gangster. He had risen to the post of west -lie commander of the rem-
1 CHICAGO. Aug. 1, (UP)—The rat-tat-tat of machine gun fire roared again in Al Capone’s old stronghold of Cicero today and mowed down
Tony Marino, alias Dominic Russo, | jj ev . ^ Merrill Ivey, leader of the Gipone forces on the D<> p auw GraJ> W ed» west -ide marriage of Miss Sarah Ozella Marino, who had won earlier notor- , Xees of Xew Ro38 and th e Rev. H. lety under the name of Russo, met j Merrill Ivey of Lin( j t . n , wa s solemnCapone when the gang leader was ized Saturday night at 8 o’clock at serving a year in jail in Philadelphia | lhe home of tht , brille with the Re v.
on a gu-toting charge.
He was shot dowm today by three machine gunners as he sat in his automobile at the entrance of a gar-
men were sought, and that they were ani Minn.? H. Elliott the appraisers suspected of the kidnaping allowed the Elliotts damages of $380, Tne family -ome lays ago divorced w-hile in the suit against Groveland itself from activity on the part of Ledge No. 542 F. & A. M. the apauthoritie.-, choo-ing to pursue its praisers allowed the lodge damages owti met ods of effecting the return of $1.,,>0 The state condemned of Urschel Whether ransom was of an acre of land belonging to the
paid on the consummation plans was not revealed.
Word has be ■ received here of ihe birth of a daughter July 27th to Mr and Mrs- J F Willis of Bainbridgv, Ga Mrs- WilL- a daughter of Mr
inary street left Tuesday for Estes j and Mrs- C. K Hughes of this city. Park. Colo, where she will visit with Harold Port, -outh Indiana street, frien Is- who is employed by the American Eleven marriae'e licenses were is- 1 Telephone an Telegraph company -ue by County Clerk John W. Herod left Tuesday t spend a two week's during July, a cording to records on vacation in Detroit and northern
file in his office. Michigan. Dr and Mrs. H B Longden and Rulh
Grafton Langdeti left Tuesday mom-
of thair ! Elliotts and .i»3 of an a re be'onging
to the lodge.
From Washington had come the earlier statement* by J. Edgar Hoover, department of justice chief, that the identity of the kidnapers was
fought to be known.
v - + + + + + * h\' I JEFFERSON I MP. + + By Mrs. Viola McCammack + ♦ + •*♦♦♦♦♦ Mr and Mrs. Doris Solsman visited .‘ ith Mr and Mrs. Willie Solsman Sunday. Bertha Terry Be-sie McCammack . id Marjorie McCammack called on i aia Prichard and children Friday eften.oon Sammy Goodpasture returned to his here in Muncie Sunday after visitng relative? here f-.r the past two
weeks
Mr and Mrs. Garence Crow and
Great* r damages were allowed the lodge bw.au>e it will be forced to move its lodge hall and store room back awa. 1 from the inter-ection as a result of the condemning of part of their lot Condemnation was necessary in onde. to give a clear view in all dire, tions at the intersection. In the event t e state or defendants in the actions refuse to accept the figure, the suits will be tried by the
court.
Elvers of Greencastle
has accepted a position as clerk and stenographer at the Greencastle office of the N rthem Indiana Power company. She -uceeeds Mrs. Alpha
Robinson Scot'
Caroline B. Hutchins has been named admin trattix of the estate j of Clarence Lincoln Hutchins, late
nants of the Capone gang. In day- of prosperity this was the richest teriitory held under the sway of the infamous “syndicate.” Cicero, Berwyn and the western suburbs was Marino' province. The killing today was reminiscent of the wild days of the early Capone period when Chicago's streets roared frequently with gunfire in the bitter battle over rich ganmbling and liquor
spoils.
The slayers drove slowly past the automobile in which Russo was seated and opened fire with a burst from their machine guns. The gangster was killed without a chance to defend
as security in need of
" P"* art
,, , rfcad y cast Also, loans o„ ho-^,/. goods and live nock, write nr ,,hon e 15 ,
Indiana Loan Cj
Phone 15
24 1-2 E . " ash Sir e „
ing for Bay View, Mich., where they will spend a monthMr. and Mrs. Otto Lakin. MrsGeorge Landes and Miss Mary Florer.e Landes, Washington street spent Tuesday at Hoosier highlands. Mapel Chapel Methodist church will c mduct an <jien air meeting at the cast entrance of the Court hou<e lawn. Saturday evening at 8 o’clock There will be instrumental and vocal
music.
H B. Phillips >f Memphis, Tenr...
spent Sunday visiting h'g father, A B. . . — — 1 • . , ,
Phillii s and is aunts the Misses Ella "'in Wright and daughter Jewel. Mr.' "' u,t ' ly kn " wn P 01 '^ character, was an I Emma Beckwith- Mr Phillips is and Mrs. Man Woodsworth, Adam i shot “J ^ ^ ^ fled i> f ™ n the
Appraiser- were Je-^se Mc.Anally, connected with the WsAermans steam- Reising and Lee Hall all attended a ''” ne '' a * 2 l 10 U P' Police had
| himself.
Marino was serving a sentence in
Roachdale man. in the Putnam cir- , the Phiiadelphia jsil at the same time cuit court. T e deceased left an es-. ** < a pone. The pair became tate valued at several thousand dol- <l ua tnted and Marino followed Capone l arg here and tok a place in the gang or.Mr. and Mi- George Reising and i Ka ” izat10 ”' .. • » 1 m 1 » 1 Meanwhile Eddie Macijewgki, a
(laughter Mary June. .Mr. and Mrs. | ... .
Dolby Coiling?, and Lafe McGaughey. Mrs. Rosella Luce. Mrs.’ Mildred Atterbury. and daughters Rosella an 1 Geialdine of Loveland, Colorado, and Mrs- J A Dietrich of near Greencastle, spent Tuesday with Air and Mrs Gilbert Knetzer of near Fill-
ship corporation at Memphis. Harold Rarsbcrg, of Indianapolis and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Light and Mrs Burton. Sigma Chi house mother, of Greencastle, called on George Eubank Sun lay afternoon. George i? making steady improvement and is 011* each day for a short drive.—
Martinsville Reporter.
Socialist speaking at Cunot Sunday■ seen the bandits star t ^ holdup and afternoon. Mai y June remained for a. ?et a trap for them when th e>'
few days’ visit with relatives.
WE SAW THIS TODAY! N»C sO dRy The fl-h thAt Liv£ heRe neVer herd O’ prOBitiUN Or DePreShUN
emerged.
Maciejewski fled when he was ordered to halt and was felled with six police bullets.
UNTIL WE LEARNED BETTER
we used to mix wood and steel in our car
bodies—then. But the state of the art
Until we learned better,
bodies and wheels.
It was the best way to make
has advanced.
Of course, it is more expensive to make an all-steel body than to make a wooden frame and nail steel panels on to it. The better way involves an initial expenditure of several millions Of dollars for new dies, which renders a change very costly. Cars, especially large expensive cars which are produced in small volume, cannot afford this, because the cost as much for one car as for a million. That alone explains why
steel bodies are not used in all cars.
But our basic policy from the beginning is to make a good car better,
regardless of cost.
For example, when we discarded wood-steel body construction, not because we lacked wood. We still have some thousands of best hard wood in America Economy would urge us to use up first, and then adopt the better all-steel body. But we
quality was more important than expense.
We weighed the reasons, for and against, before we made the chang*.
We could see only one reason for retaining a mixed wood-and-steel body
—nailing the metal on, instead of welding an all-steel body into a strong one-piece whole. That reason w^, it would be cheaper Our reasons for adopting an all-steel body were these: body is not much stronger structurally than its wooden American ‘climates, wood construction weakens with age.
gives evidence A car may have
dies all-
it was
acres of the
the wood
decided that
for us.
A wood-steel frame. In all
Every used car lot
of this Rain seeps in between joints and the wood decay*, a metal surface, and yet not be of steel construction.
Under extreme shock or stress the steel body remains intact—dented per-
haps, but not crushed
Steel does not need wood for strength or protection. Wood is fin* fog
furniture, but not for the high speed vehicles of 1933.
In the Ford body there are no joints to squeak, no seams to cracK j or leak. ^
The all-steel body i§ more expensive—to us, but not to you. By all odds, then, steel bodies seem preferable.
Wheels also have become all-steel. No one argues that an electrically welded one-piece steel wheel, such as the Ford wheel, needs to be "strengthened" by adding wood to it. . > r The one-piece all-steel body is the strongest, safest, quietast, most,
durably body mad*. That is our only reason for making them.
SMALL STORES GET EAGLES | WASHINGTON, Aug. 1, (UP)— I Owner? of ?rr.all stores who tend their ! shops by themselves ai»i have no em- ! plcyes were granted permission today to display the NRA sign of the blue
eagle.
Many such shopkeepers had feared they might be placed at a disadvantage in competing with larger establishments which had come under the voluntary re-employment agreement and were displaying the emblem, j In order to obtain the blue eagle, , however, the one-man stores must sign the agreement the same as stores with many clerks. The minimum wage and maximum hour proviison of course will not ap- | ply in such cases a.? the storekeeper j has no employes. Other sections of .the agieement, such as the pledge to ' refrain from profiteering, will be i . binding. Coincident with this ruling, the j NRA asked the public to deal fairly with employer* who are striving to comply with the agreement but find 1 it difficult to effect quickly the readjustments which they must make before they can display the blue eaale The NRA recognized that it ^ is hard for some stores, particularly | those with onlv one or two employes, to make the readjustment? in hour? at once. j Following receipt of several com- | plaints of unfair use of the blue eagle ( in advertiisng, the NRA called atten- j 1 tion to the fact that the insignia is the property of the government and may be used only by authority of the NRA. It asked the cooperation of newspapers in preventing use of the emblem in advertisements of companies which have not complied with the re-employment agreement.
• ->.vor W. r ° LD SCENR believed to be rh 1 which a murder trial f
I
in 17*7. rdd!tl °n-'. tooj
A man named Joh,
purged with slaving cam* ^
Conrow on a ^
1
77"' PM., y 1 >»C3 nzT^i -'ad- hanging f,,,. ^ b >’ a handWcLn
Homer P. Ivey, superintendent of the Crawrfordsville district of the Methodist church, and father of the biidegroom, officiating. The bridegroom .? a graduate of DePauw and Northwestern universitei? and has been pastor of the Linden and Kirkpatrick Methodist churches. The bride graduated from Indiana State Teachers college at Terre Haute. 4* 4* •F i F Her. William McFadden Married Sunday The marriage, of Miss Glenora English- a daughter of Mr. and Mrs A. D. English of Bloomington, formerly of Worthington, to the Rev William A McFadden took place Sunday at the first Christian church at Bloomfield. The ceremony was read by the pastor, thei Rev. W. E. Moore. The bride was graduated from Indiana university in 1931 and was home economics teacher in the Lyons high school last year. The bridegroom i- a graduate of DePauw university and is now paAtor of the Methodist church at Newburgh.
++++♦♦
Robert son-Pesa vent Wedding Announced The wedding of Miss Mary Pesavent and Graham Robertson, both of Chicago, took place Saturday, July 29 in Chicago. Mr. Robertson, who is the son of R. A. Robertson of this city, is a graduate of DePauw university with the class of 1930 and is a member of Lambdi Chi fraternity. The young couple will make.their home in Chicago where the bridegroom is employed with the Bell Telephone company.
+ + •!• «!• •#•
Putnamvill? \\. W. 4-H Club Meets
The Putnaqaville W. W. 4-H club •re r Wednesday at the schoolhouse. Two leaders, three guests and seven member* were present. The president, Christine Lanham, had charge of the business meeting. The meetiag was then turned over to the 1 hairman of the clothing committee. Three clothing demonstrations were given T^e next meeting will be Wednesday,
Aug. 2.
■*■ + + + ♦ *
O E. S. To Meet
Wednesday
Greencastle chapter No. 256 0. E. S. will meet in regular session Wednesday evening at 8 o’clock.
+ * + •{• + + + Spencer Couple Married Here
Miss Nancy F Bavin and Robert WANTED—Housewoik r 1 K. Philli; both of Spencer, were children by .,n • • ■*
married here Monday afternoon by Rev. Gust E Carlson, pastor of the First Bapti.-t church The bridegroom is a sor of A. R Phillips, Spencer
jeweler-
MERCHANTS IO(i)0PElJ < I on Miniftl t rout I'tiKf Hit I Hi* eommittae of ...| composed cf Giarles MG* secretary of the Chamber jf I metre; Otis Gar : j organization, and Jaivb Eitil,( the two aerial visitor* t d This was the first refreshaj had received since leavinc F rl on their da«h around the vatu cold drinks were aprmciateA
TO HONOR RiiBINniV | Re; -4 veterans’ organizati 1.- aad a s in Graamast • f parade and receptirn tj bet Sen. Arthur R. Robinsaninl polis ne\t Sunda. T' a/Yjir^ sponsored by all veterans
tions in Indiana.
Sen. Robins, n w speik ^ north • I orial following • . . ■ gs are si hedul d 1 |
M \RHI \(,l I K KVE
Robert E- Phillips. sal«*J Nai cy F. Ba. * 1
Spencer.
Mr an 1 lira. ' • - 1 kj
and family of Ii inapolii, ■ Mrs S 1. Sincla T'-l
and Mrs. B<-1].' Honu town, Iowa, spieiit Sunday 1 A H Horne of Putnamvilk
dress Box M, Banner off <1
Miss Juanna Donnehue of this city is in Chicago attending the World’s Fair.
Lydia E. Pinkha Tablets Relieve) Control Periodic!
Mrs. Hannah Craver, north Jackson street read, was removed from the county hospital to the Robert Long hospital in Indianapolis, Tuesday
morning.
Qiaical tests prove it- Tikis today for welcome ezsc v*\ fort. Take them regularly fotf oeot relief. No narcotics. No unpleasant effects. Sold by all druggists tog. Larger sue, if you prda [
July 31, 1933
STATE MILL COMPLY It ■mtlaueit l-'rnin I'ae. ttn.t human food and about 200.000,000 more for feed and seed. While the aatimated production this year, which is the shortest crop in 40 years, is 495,000 000 bushels, the nation next year will still have a carry over of about 200,0011000 bushels. With a normal yield in 1934, which the law of averages indicates is likely, the carry over two years hence will be back where it is now with the probable demoralization of wheat prices as occurred in the past year, unless something is done to prevent its recurrence. The Agricultural Adjustment Act is the government’s effort to adjust supply bo donv*ti demand, temporarily forgetting the world den.and, which apparently is “out of the picture’’ at least for the time being and the next few years ahead.
To Our Customers In order to comply with the rules!*" down by the National Recovery Act a |,( * " ith a code adopted by the WHOLES^ (.ROCER’S ASSOCIATION we Sinning August 1st open at 7:00 A. close at 4:30 P. M. each w eek day " M ttl( exception on Saturday we will close 12:00 noon. TREMBLY S WILLIA!«|
