The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 October 1933 — Page 3

J H£ DAILY-BANNER GREENCASTLE. INDIANA. MONDAY. OCTOBER 2. 1933.

IMIS ' Vh ^ :K ’ S WEATHER

| Generally fair, except showers .Thursday and probably Friday. (' 0 ,,1 Monday and Tues lay, wanner Wed-

MOVIES

L>q-$tudebaker Sedan | X (i Wire Whetda

$225

| |l M i 'aH.NKR, 9:13 NBC

L Morrison, Foster

llrd Deal"* Since 1910

kllllH 1

I itltlMH

nesday, cooler by Friday.

NOTICE OF AUMlNlfrl l{ \ I |u\

Notice i< hereby (riven that the undersigned has been appointed by the Juiljre of the Circuit Court .,f I’utnain

"o rtiiiiimtlllimmitlllHIIII t ' ount >', state of Jndian “ n.lministra-

! tor of the estate of Janie- H. Humphrey, lute of Putnam Count' , de. eased. Said estate is* supposed t.i he sul-

vent-

Chester H. Humphrey administrator September is, 1983 Attorney, Hays & Murphy. No. 7367John W Heroil, Clerk of the 1‘utnqm Circuit 0»urt. iK-3t

THE

[AMERICAN SFXURITY

,co.

oans & Discounts phone 98 \\y, & VTashinitton St.

assified ads

-For

r NOTICE OF ({I'ALIFK ATION OF

• EX ECFTOR

Notice is hereby eiven, that {he unIdmigned lias duly (justifiedExe cutor of the last will and testament of

Birdie M. Jacobs deceased, in the J'|'iac\. a tin 'li . -tn outwits a tr.u

\ l HIE '*lt VN \I»A

Lee 1 i ai y, who has pla\ed reporter-, dumnists, fa-t-talking* majors and other fas. mating chaiacters, now mmm "■ ,h>

M '(*reen as an am-

T,hulan.

BASEBALL RESULTS American IwaKUe Ih'troit. 5; Cleveland. .‘1. Philadelphia, 3: Washington. 0 (eleven inninirs). New York, (if Host or .‘i Chieagfo, 5; St- Ixiui- 1.

Merchants ^iu 12-Iiiiiin^ Tilt

• ,—. —,...

LOCAL SEMI.PRO

) of many trade treaties between t'an- , ada and foreign countries is antici- 0

I pated here heforr long.

National League

Pittsburgh, 7 !t; Cin. lnna';, 5-3.

(second game ten innings) Brooklyn, 5; \i w 'l • k. 2. Chicago. 7; St. I»u . 1 Boston. 4; Philadei| hia, !

Bl SSEI.I.VILI I WIN’S

chasing

®s h y - ter lawyer

pypm J-J and m a kes

v " ’ * laLjgli.-. romance.

^ :|| 1,1 I thrills out of If ~~ ’Jm •" amazing legal

I j acket. Tracy’s

' V ’ ”■ a PP MI * ance i- in’ Mctni-Goldwyn-Mayer’s ' '’ Bn-sellvilfc 1 . - defeated “The Nuisance,” « ich comes to the •Wot n, i. to 1, in an 'ercsting tilt Granada theater Tuesday., ’ |Morton Sunday. I'i . tor was the Tne fast talking, whimsical hero of v.inning hurler while howhyr twirled i|uii k moving dr., . expose- the in- | *" r Moiton. Itusselh ii.. irncrod 15 1 < d mi claim* rticket jn i'B* ®t>d made two ef* \| rton coi the new (lictun . Tin-re are hilarious '‘‘'I 'ody 3 hits ami committel .-(•qiicnces in q sioat skating link, hhlcs.

game. He will tie i>ut to win the first game of the series Tuesilay fr in his

old teammates.

Hutcheson and Clemlcning will

form the local 1 attcry. These two boys The most favored nation clause, K have lieen handling the hitter- from , when inserted in me treaty, often is

1 TEAM KH«M>IN KNIGHTS- 1 ‘f 1 * *' ’ ,, ''I"'i" n "[l cxtendei automaticaillv to other coun-

1I..A11 -SM \IM.N I\>IUHIS- thp | eiltrue . in ,i „.ji| t„. working hard

V,LLK 9 m » | to win that first game from Hover- , nM ’ ,n tb<? , ’ e ‘ f,,l,at,on ,,f the French

I dale. Cox will be held in reserve for ' t, ' ,>at ’ V r “ -entl >' Car ‘* was •‘ J “‘>’ciseA in

1 I ' h, ‘ Merchants won a second ga.me of the series which ! * , ' m X that th( ' French < ’ onim od‘ t «* 12-inning game Sunday afternoon at w ill he played at Cloverdale on the! that w '‘ r< ‘ * iven preferential treat-;-he lama- park from the Knightsvilla j M(>rris()n Kri dav afternoon | m " nt r " ul ' 1 , " >t ^ ■" ,1,cat< ' :i The 1 «iri-pm baseball team, !* to 8. A October (5th ;a r *’ < ’ , ’ n, ‘ ,,lr,T1 d,, es not opjily to some large orow. saw the contest and de- | ^ w *, j, ex))e cted to at- " th, ’ r trade ‘’onventions and the efmandel another meeting of the two j tMlli th( . M , ,,| av .„ ff KamPfl alul n0 | ,,f th ' ir “I'enUion are causing dubs. Coa-e<fusntly. the Merchant- , ,| oubt th ,. v wiM , M . trpateit t „ serie - i ‘'’ouble. It is suggested that the whole

will clash 1 0 f interesting baseball contents Wt-favored nation’ irrangemwt

thrillin) d auto ac< ident ■ and dramati courtnnnn episodes,

iniiiimiiiitiMiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiii

SALE—Player piano at treet. Reasonable for

tale,

Putnam County Circuit ( f Put* | tkm npany, ti< a city’* trai i nam ( ounty. Indiana, and has been and engages i; other -anguinary ad- | • 1 : ■ ■ • ■ I 1 ■ \ ai entu »nd rrii

187 lAiiniitaf aid • tate. . mt out to de* ,

Said e-tate is supposed to be sol- liver him into the t 1- of the bar as-

27-tf

-AI K: New in idem five room j.,,11 .-cnHjnt, garage, fruit I; od location. Terms reason1,11 fanner office. 2'J-3p.

I -ALE: Seed Rye. G. C. Parkt’csiille, Ind., R. F. 1). 1. Mon-Sat-tf.

<ALE: Bure bred Duroc JerL s and gills, eligible to regis1. ,, - 00. I>r. E. M. Hurst, | Mon-Thu ti SALE: Six lul>e Kmlhler radio, table model, 17 inches 114.00. Furniture Exchange, lie Suiiure. Phone 170-L. ' 30-2t. SALE Plenty of fancy eatL Al-.i g oil cooking a|iples lullough’.- orchard. 23-tf

—For Rent-

In \i Kiirnishc-l apartment, nater and heat furnished. |68-Y. It.

vent. Sertemhc r 16, 1983. Robert H N'ewgent, Executor C. R. Dickerson, attorney John W Herod, Clerk of the Put

sociation.

One n!

nam Cirmit Court

t e majo 1 brills in the pic-

, lUle .- the aieazim frameup of the | street car com any president, staged by Tr.u y to got hi. sweetheart out f

!S-3t. : j a i|.

1929 Whiooct Sedan

$165

I.I'M & AHNEK 'i:i:, NBC Kinu', Morrison. Foster Eord l)e:ilers Since I‘HO imiimmiiiimmimiiiHiimimimmiiin

IPdiN’T: Furnished or unfurllight housekeeping rooms or] Bent Mi Weddell 804 South . |Ave. 2-2t. J | RENT: Modem furnished , Moderate rates, 702 East H 20'tf. 1 I RENT:—Modern six room j 1 1 I -e in. $20-, iff 26 fits.

— Wan led-

HiD To buy 30-inch cut-off « Ad ress Box O Banner It.

IT’D:! or 5 room house with k iin-l Clo-e in, Call Banner

30-2p.

Office wank by experI n Part or all time Box !'•- Office 2ii nt firn Any kind of dead stock (" i ireerrastle. W’e pay all! John W’achtel Co. 24-tf j Miscellaneous— I'I 1 I -October is a good time | your piano tuned, Mr- Me- | Will !>o here week of Ort 2nd ' it i a ntes call Mis - Elizabeth | ii.'", 416-Y. 30 2r | ROSE C. MILLIGAN, Spir">i Hiriness Advisor. Located nly, 20!t S, Jackson ‘At. 1172 K 2-Op.

h \I.C\NU)I\N |l MI;i) POLICE i\ E BIRTHDAY N'lN’GTON, (UP) The Rnyal’j f** Mointod I’ohro, I'amiiu- in I" 1 ■ -b i . - as the Royal Northll nli-il P-:lic,.,_ this year is celeY '- 'dth birthday, according ['u’-'aiial Geographic S.wiety. ety tells the complete story tammis “Mounties," from 1872, I'T-I a gani/.ed- as the N'orthPl" hi!, ,| Pi,lice, a t Fort Stone, f 1 ' In an- at pence bud day on the force grew *' I -’babIy it.s most faiim'lh Pr was the Klondike Gold ' 1 |l ', when the Mnuntje* pa- * ud uproarious hoMI L ,(, 4 ibp force was “knighted’’ ! 11 for its Boer War -erF I " the Royal Mounte I 1 '""k its present name in ' ' " '* '* jurisdiction was widr '' ' ,r p nf nx-ement of federal f ty | i hr " , ighout Canada. I, '’ 'Vs the fieogra) hie F', ' t . h ‘' Mounte I Police patr.-l r V last L ' r ‘‘ at frontier, the I lalmda stretching, from P E ^ *o Alaska. '

. Sc/ SAJAfC/S WALLACE ‘V .A GREAT FOOTBALL ROMANCE COPYRIGHT IBJO.J3Y FRANCIS WALLACE ■—> DISC n : !S UTLD BY RING KBATUttES S YNOICATS, .'.VC.

SYNOPSIS Ycmng and ambitious Ted Wynne realizes he cannot ask the wealthy Barb Roth to marry a mill hand, so he leaves his position in the Heliport steel null and works his way through Old Dominion college. He shows promise in football, and Barney Mack, the coach, takes an interest in him. Tom Stone, star player and Ted’s rival for Barb’s affections, is antagonistic towards him. Ted, how- ! ever, is admired by the other students. During vacation he toils in the mill to earn his tuition and prepare for the fall football season. Rosalie Downs, of a neighboring college, discusses philosophy with Ted. She is furious when he laughs i at her and calls him conceited. CHAPTER VII The cigar hail almost burned to the end. Ted suddenly felt like a fool. He might as well leave But the door opened and Rosalie came back. She approached bint doubtfully, eyes troubled and con-

trite.

'Led walked to meet her; -be smiled quickly and rushed into his arms. He held her close for awhile. “I’m sorry, kid,’’ he whispered into her hair. She smiled radiantly, led him by the hand to the piano, played for

him.

Rosalie was talented. “Sorry,” Barb said over the phone. "I’m driving with Toni to Pittsburgh for a ball game ’’ "You’re breaking a date," he re-

minded her.

"This is something special. Can’t you come any other evening — how about Monday?” “I’m working and need my -deep Sunday’s the only morning 1 can

sleep in.’*

“Pm sorry, Ted.” “If you break this date it'll be the last one.” "Well—if you want to be that way, u 4 ! right '

“Goodby.” “Goodby.”

Barb slapped the phone down and hit her lip. He had a neite, who was he to talk to her like that? She should give up a trip to Pittsburgh to spend an evening hearing him talk about himself. But she felt a little guilty, a little sorry. He was a nice boy, if you handled hint right, and he certainly treated her the way she wanted a boy to treat her—Ted was safe as a brother; not too exciting or too serious; hut better that way than

the other.

Still, it had to come. Barb was young] entirely too young to think seriously about anybody or to give all of her time to OM -h-v "*ybe she could like l><! better than ilie rest; perhaps she did, but it

T'm sorry, kid,” he whispered into her hair.

would he a mistake to evei

let him

suspect it. . . , , And he’d come back; he always

did

Throb! Throb! Throb! Strum! Strum! Ta-da-ta da-ta-da. Wah-a-wa-ha-ha . . . Shuffle . . . Clap

Clap!

"She’s watching yt>u.

Ted danced more athletically He was in shape and could prance around tirelessly. Hr felt like cut„ng loose Music Ijad piled up m hi. bones and wanted to run out his toes, run like a whooping kid,

released from school-

Oonipahl Oompaji! Wah h h wa fc *Thcre was music in the mill, too; the -whirring of the big fiv wheels, the revolution of the rol • _,f vou listened for it; but only H.u Fritz could express it with a U,,1 “ t Fritz wi'h his pot

-colored teeth, haiiv

move with the poetry of motion. Ted hadn't come back; he had gone to the telephone many times, convinced himself that lie hail been wrong; but he hadn't called. For the time being he was blocking ars; it wasn’t a hot job and lie didn't need sleep; and he had asked Rosalie to the 1 ennis Club danc*. Ted was proud of Rosalie; she was a gypsy, exotic. It was a pretty dre-s although Ted never got more than a general impression of a girl's outfit. "She's following you with her

eyes.”

Girls were funny. Rosalie and

Barb didn’t like each other; they had gone to Academy together; Rosalie had skipped a class or Barb had been held back — anyhow Rosalie had gone oil to college. She and her mother had just enough to get by. Her mother was

society editor of the News. Rosalie sang as they danced: “Take-some honey from the bee

Mix it up with TNT And wliat've you got?

Magnolia—”

Rosalie could sing the blue songs ami make you feel thing-; sin- was a dancing fool—and pretty. Stone was look ip g her over. Stone wanted to rut in on every new girl, as if he were appointed to take them over when they reached a

certain stage.

Barb floated by, always greatly

interested in the boy she was with;

w hen it wa* Stone, dancirfg

and bending over her like a gigojo,

Ted burned up.

Why didn’t Barb and Rosalie like each mlier? They were both good kids although different, of ’mi, -e Yon never knew what Path was thinking but Rosalie came r,;Tit lilt with it; she was more

like a fellow.

And she could dance; she was warm got a ki^k out of it D »nc- „ , K.-.-Uie wa- •' compelling thing; it took your body and your tl ,jnd, and then it made you feel

-qmetliing too.

I'.nh was smooth and airy 8 well dancer and you couldn » lose , irr . except on a reverse now and

Sw »&• “ju-g |~ r „'£’#5liV...I ‘•■"K

and tbiek-aoled show could i tl.cn. u ^

into it; Baib was le iding sonic, thing back—Ted al"ays got tin impression of an invi Me hand between them, holdie him back; Barb's hand; and 1>< i ace with its curious, taunting, inviting smile. Going by now, saving: I can get you whenever 1 want you. Yeah? It was time to do something about Barb; make lur see that neither her money m i her position meant a thing to him. She was a line girl and all that; maybe too good for him; hut Ted wasn't quite so certain about that any more. There was an :ui-tocracy of brains as well as money; if you had the brains you could make the money; then you'll have both. He'd seen enough of Barb to know he couldn’t come to her unless lie was her social equal; that would take time. In the meantime he might as well show her that he wasn’t a poodle dog to he whistled at. Barb didn't like Rosalie; Rosalie was a good scout; maybe it would burn up Barb if he kept busting around with Rosalie. But Rosalie left town with her mother during August, off to a l ake F.rie resort. Ted got lonesome over the week ends and fought continually against the temptation of the telephone A broken date wasn't so much, after all, and she had always been on the level with him. He dreamt ol her, saw her face in the furnace fires—a shining vision in pastel shades. But it wasn’t just a broken date — it was something deeper; and Ted hung on. Through long everungs of sitting on the porch swing, or in the town park, or talking to Big Red at the city jail or chatting with the boys at the pool room, he battled for his principle. She had said he couldn't beat her at anything; that was no frame of mind for a prospective bride. She’d have to respect him before -he could like him, aud she couldn't respect h'tv: if he surrendered. (Xs Sc CYtttwued) *

i it'd Fin gbl - v illn Grays

again next Sunday mu the lau-a.i din

mond.

.Kmneth Asdale. twirler far tjie Ins j ' er-. gave one of the liest pitching | performancei* seen here this season. | A-ilah* went the entire route for the • Gray . allow"trg only 9 hits He -truck , out I I local batsmen and his control • >n four different occasions kept the i Merchants from collecting their winnirg run until the 12th frame. Dean started for the Merchants hut ! retired in favor of M. Sutherlin in | the fourth. The latter allowed only 5 ; hit- u-ing the remainder of the mat- | im ■ and fanned 12 Knjghtsville slug- j gets j H. S. Ball Series To Open Tuesdav GREI N( \STLE TU MEET ( LUV. ERDAI.E HERE IN FIRST OF I HREE GAMES (in eiuaslle and C1< verdale, unde feitcd tennis in the northern and -outhern divisions of the Putr.azn county high school baseball league, will lay the first of a series of three games to decide the county championhi| Tuesday afternoon at 2:20 o’d iek at I ucas park. Roth teams have won six straight game- A -mall admi- ion will he charged to help defray expenses of staging the games. OtaJi hers, ex-cub pitcher and athlete will he or. the mound for the south Putnam mine. He has pitched i very gaime thus far and has a remarkahle -trikeout record He has also held the .apposing batsmen to very few scattered hits in every hall

H \D \ MA\ 1(1 \ IBM I \YOKED I K \I)E I RE M IES OTTAWA. Out. (UP)— A review

he revised and specific agreements with specific countries covering the particular commodities that it is mutually profitable to exchange he sub-

stituted-

World Series Managers Meet

Bill Terry (left), first baseman and manager of the pennantwinning New York Giants, wishes Joe Cronin, manager of the W ashington Senators, lots of luck just before the Senators opened their game with the Yankees at New York. They'll hardly be so cordial when they meet us rivals for World Series pennant.

Devil’s Island Felon Shipment Sets Record « j

I Guy Daviu m/ TriaV •**’ When the famous prison ship, La Mat time, c. recently -ailed from St. Martin-Do Re France, on her yearly ..... to Devil’s Island the French penal ettlnii nt. I th c-a-i of Guiana. South Amema. foi iho first me in her history she carried a capacity of , , mnnal- '17::. Not only that, hut also tor the first time Ihl will n aki- a second trip in one year with 200 nmre hud men. Among the desperadoes in the but hipnient wm'Guy^avin,TOung' F™enifflman convict".! of nmnl"-:ng Richard Wall, an American. I-, MOO. The chances of anyone escaping from Devil’.- I .land are said to he 1.000 to 1 against For it a c.nv , succeed. In eluding his human guards, he still must , nu-nd with fever-ridden swamps, venomous snaL. * and man- * eating sharks that infest the surrounding waters.

O

ST. MARTIN'-DE-RE, France, Oct. The fact that France has lieen swept hy an unprecedented crime wave during the last year became apparent when the l.a Martiniere, the wold’s last prison dip, sailed from here recently with its annual cargo (f criminals for Devil’s Islani.i, the French penal settlement off the South American coast. For the first time history Ui Martiniere was filled rapacity And not only that, but the first time she will have to

make a return trip.

In all, the record selection i f convicts scheduled to go to the dreaded settlement thi.- year numbered 84,1

the prison ship coudl take only n the first trip. She will com-

plete the transportation of France’s

had men in mid-December.

It wss a strange and rather terrifying experience to -ee the motley I throng of criminals, guarded by fifty wardens and troop of Senegalese in- ] fantrymen, say their farewell- to hope. Gathered to wish them (ironj leal thought) “bon voyage” was a hiI /;,rre collection i f wives, sweethearts, .friends and, here an I there, a lawyer

, seeing the las, of a lost cage

Included in the voyagtvs to “Hope’s

in to

for

But ,572

convicted of poisoning two wive- and ,leath, th, murderer’- -i ntence was attempting to mete out a similar fate automatically commute* I to Ilf,

to his m ther. Another criminal, of interest to Americans, who set forth to spend the remainder of Ins life ill Devil’s Island is Guy Davin, 26 year] old Frenchman, who murdered Richard Wall, an American, in 1931, for

$800.

Davin and Wall had been asso,dated in an auto-stealing racket in 1’nris. They also trafficked in drugs, on a small scale. Apparently the American ha I lieen taking the lion's share of the illicit profits and Davin showed his resentment by killing him. A peculiar feature of the case w is Davin’s attempt to pa— imsrlf off as his victim after the crime. However, the most interesting of the desperate passenger- was the French murderer Bioyer, whose life was saved hy the ill wind of a presi-

dential assassination.

Boyer was on his .way <•> the guillotine yvhen news that I'resident Paul Dmmier had been a**assimiteil readied the prison. In Fran o it is the legal theory that a man mav Is* reprived up to the last minute before

End,” as the island has been named, j live. As there was no president at ji g thf notoricui Di. Laget, who was j the moment scheduled fur Buyer’s

to life im-

prisonment. Whether or not Boyer thinks lie is lucky is a matter of conjecture. Many who have sampled Devil’s Island would douhtles- offer the opinion that Boyer was not so linky, their belief lieing that death is preferable to the horrors of the fever I iddeli pest hide whither he is hound. Devil's Island, the isolated "Land of Forgotten Men" off the coast of Guiana, is by its location alone, apart fi oni pri.--in hardships, calculated to bread the most hariencd spirit. It i- said that a white man dare hardly stir the soil so poisonous ar« the iniasmic vapors that arise from it. Yet the convict* have t" till the soil. Island swamps jiimunt with venomous snakes and clou.I- of noxious iii-iit-, which iiio< lot. !!i"ir victims with malaria and yell iw fever st every stroke of their wing-. No w’ortder humlrdes have mot death attempting to escape. Few have ever -111, . led ill getting . leal aw :iy ft OBI the island, f r should a onvict evade the vigilance of the guards, the

h \> high r, dr uM ,• haniea are a thw- 1 ’" ’

■ niic from the country'.- i Idef exeeu- him breaking thr. ugh the onion of

man eating -harks that infest the

surrounding waters.