The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 October 1933 — Page 1

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+ .♦ ♦ * ♦ THI WRATBI* 4 FAIR and WARMBK +

FORTY-ONE

the D AILY o BAJN NEB

4.4. + 4-4 + -f# ♦ ALL THE HOME, NEWS ♦ 4 UNITED PRESS SERVICE * ♦ 4 ♦ ♦ 4 « ’♦ 4

UCE throng ekpected at air carnival

„ CIRCUS TOMORROW . IS sponsored by local legion post

s\ FEATURES PLANNED

Be Held At City Airport. Airpluw Harrs And Other Stunts On Program. One of the biggest crowds that has assemble I at the city airport is ted tomorrow afternoon for the circus which will be held under auspices of Putnam County Post American l>egion. Hundreds of kets have been sold by the Legiones and much interest has been jfert all week not only in Greenlc but in rural sections and surjnding towna. lembers of the committee in charge the air carnival stated this momthat in case of rain, the show’ will postponed one week- However, the boys are counting on fair ather tomorrow- an I promise the Utors a thrilling program replete th features. Harry Boggs, manager of the Cap Airport at Indianapolis, will bring fleet of airplanes here to stage •s, dead stick landings, war-time fighting, ground acts, and other resting and difficult stunts. Policing of the grounds, )>arking of and directing of traffic will lie t in the callable hands of fifty exdiers under the direction of Capt. -rles Donnohue. T^y^ity council agreed to send o 'he fire ks to the airport ff .-«*• ction the \arious pilots and their ships in of accident and possible flames. program for the afternoon is ounced as follows: 100 p m Air parade over town of ships 00 r m. Harry Boggs will give noiiatration of balloon bursting a ship’s propeller:1a p m .Stunts by Harry Bogg:30 p m. Air dug fight by two ship 3:00 p m Races with the three ■test ships in Indiana. '3 30 p. m. Power dive from leveling off at 50 feet from the aund 1-1:00 p m. (iood ground act by ENew, Indianapolis attorney. ;4:15 p. m Dead stick stunts and “td stick landing. (4:30 p. m. Stunts by Billie Jones srre Haute. [5:00 p m. Parachute jump from feet by Jean Rock of Fort syne. Opening chute 1,500 feet “vm ground

Li Arms Deadlock

a GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14. 1933,

NO. 3f2

DEPAliW WILL CELEBRATE • HOMECOMING

OLD GOLD DAY TO BE OBSERVED ON CAMPUS NEXT SATURDAY

IS THREE-DAY CELEBRATION

Festivities to Open Friday Night With Presentation of Play

Ousted by President STRESSING OF • EDUCATION ISWAY TO PEACE

Prince Otto von Bismarck, Ger many’s Charge D'Affaires in Lon don, pictured as he left the British Foreign Office after he had conveyed to Foreign Minister Sir Johr Simon Germany’s rejection of the three-power disarmament proposal Nazi insistence on re-arming indicates the Geneva Di>armament Con ference is wrecked before openim?

List University Chapel Speakers DR. S. PARKES t ADMAN OF BROOKLYN, X. Y.. FEATURE SPEAKER

uni-

Del’auw university students :iro laying plans fur Old Gold day which will lie celebrated next Saturday, Oct. 21. dt is DePauw’s annual fall! homecoming event and probably the most colorful occasion on the Del’auw j

campus.

! The program as being outlined by ! i the student senate is almost a three- j j' ay celebration -with the festivitieopening on Friday night with the traditional iionfiie and pep session on McKeen field. It is planned to make 1 this bonfire the largest that has ever | been built in the history of the school, j Following the bonfire the initial per- [ forinatlce of the Old Gold day play, “Mrs. Bumstead-Leigh’’ will be pre-' sented in the Little theater. Homeci ming and Dads day have been combined this year so that a ! record crowd is anticipated for the Saturday program. The first event on the day's calendar is a baseball game between the seniors and the faculty. This will lie followed by a tug-of-war between the freshman and

| sophomore classes.

White House'Usher DR. AYLER DIES EARLY SATURDAY. ’

MUST EMPHASIZE IDEALS OE PEACE SAYS PRESIDENT • IN ADDRESS

RAISE QUALITY OE TEACHING

Mr. Roosevelt Declares Education la Vital Factor In Preserving World Peace

HEART DISEASE PROVED FATAL * TO PROMINENT LOCAL PHYSICIAN

BORN IN BALTIMORE, WD.

Dr. Ayler Had Resided Dt Grrrnraatle Since I8H9. Widow, Twin Daughteni Survive.

Ousted by President Roosevelt as a member of the Federal Trade Commission, William E. Humphrey, is pictured leaving his office after he had announced he will make a court test of the case, asserting the President is not empowered to remove him. George C. Matthews, of W'i's■.onsin, was appointed to succeed him.

The feature of the Del’auw

veraity chapel exercises for the com-

ing week will be the appearance ”f Following the class athletic events Dr. S. Parkes Cadman, pastor of the | of thp moniin|f lhR old Go | (t , iHy

chapel will lie held in Meharry hall

Central Congregational church of Brooklyn. N. Y., who will address Del’auw students Tuesday morning

in »n extended chapel period. Dr. Cadman is nationally known

for his newspaper writings and his radio talks. He has devoted his life to writing and speaking un matters of divinity and has amassed a great I following through his radio addresses [ during the last five years. He has spoken several times at Del’auw in recent years. His latest book is “Everyday QueSfi?ms and Answers," which was published in I'J.'to. lie has held many important offices and pas-

torates.

President Oxnam will be the speaker on Monday’s chapel. Efforts are being made to have Dr. Oscar Thomas Olson of the Wilmette Par- • ish M. K. church, Wilmette, 111., for ; the devotional chapel on Wednesday. Dr. Benjamin F. Swahlin, professor ^ of violin and harmony, will appear on ! the music chapel Thursday. The tegular freshman chapel will be held

Friday.

SCHOLARSHIP AVAILABLE A scholarship covering iln- registration fee lor any of the four I934 Eight Week- Short Course in Agilculturv at Purdue unberaiij "ill b 1 ' awarded In Putnam County to the winner of a county 1 ssay contest which is to he cnnducled this lull. It was anuuuuctfl today by II. SBlaydes, county advisor of the i’ur•iue Agricultural Alumni Associa-

tion.

The scholarship, which is offered by the Board <-l Trustee's of the university. "ill be awarded for the lest essay written by a Putnam county resident on “Profitable l-artn I’tactices." The scholarship will have a value of fin.on. covering the regls-

•>nt reiehstag and proclaimed foritrutlou fee lot any of tin lout slim I l’ v 12 a general parliamentary elec- 1 courses which ire to be off ted the

designed to test the nation’s i coining "inter.

Pini n of the double withdrawal , Compbte information te^ardina ’■ch precioiated Kuroue into its' »he contest may be obtained from

I Purdue university.

rniuiiy Quite League In Anger ECIPIT ATKS EUROPE INTO MOST SERIOUS CRISIS

IN YEARS

BERLIN, Oct. 14, (UPl—Germany bitter anger today announced her ithdrawal from the League of Naons and the world disarmament con-

mu p.

President Paul Van Hindonburg at ’r government request immediately teed the dissolution of the dor-

at 11 o’clock with President Oxnam delivering the homecoming address. The Old Gold day extra, souvenir edition of The DePauw, student newspaper, will be published by members of Theta Sigma Phi, coed journalism organization, and will be placed on sale early tills day. In the afternoon the feature will be the football game between DeI’auw and Manchester. The Tigers will be out to avenge a 7-6 defeat handed them by Manchester last year Preliminary exercises in which the entire student body will take part is planned for Blackstock field prior to the game. The ground "ill also be broken for the varsity house at the field if present plans go through. The varsity house will provide dressing rooms and showers for athletic teams at the field. In the evening the Dads day banquet will lie served in Bowman gymnasium as lust year. All (laris will l»e guests of the university at this dinner. More than 500 were served la.-t year. The day’s festivities will close with the second performance of the Old Gold day play. Many will remain over Sunday to hear President Oxnam on the university vespers program Sunday night. He will talk on Italy, the second of a series of addresses on “Modem Problems of Ancient Peoples.”

$5,000 Reward Spurs Ohio Hunt

CDl M Y POSTS OFFER FOR RETURN OF THREE W HO FREED

BILLING EK

precipiated Europe raveat crisis in years.

FINED AFTER CRASH

Walter J. Morgan, colored, of Indianapolis, was fined $1 and costs, amounting to $IO.f><>, by Justice of the Peace Roltert H. Newgent Saturday mot tying, when he pleaded guilty to operating a motor vehicle, on the National road without carrying flares as required under a new state law. Morgan is alleged to 'have parked his ioal truck n th. National road late Friday night near Mt. Meridian without burning flares as a warning to other motorists. He was arrested after another truck operated by Chester Kcchmit of Cleveland, collided with the Indianapolis truck. Myron Srsen, also of Cleveland, rid-

l.lM A. Ohio, O. t 14 A *f>.(M>o reward was |>osted by the Allen county commissioners today for the capture, “dead-or-alive,” of three men who la-t night fatally wounded Sheriff Jess LBarber and freed John Dillinger, prisoner i lentified as a notorious bank

robber.

Meanwhile authorities addle by | ossenien Blocked aM roads leading from the rounty afvWWnoeiitrated their search in this district, believing the desperadoes ha found a nearby hiding place. They failed t > find any trace of the fugitives or the man they relea sodThe reward was offere I a few hours after officers, through Bertillion pictures, identified the trigger man in the slaying at Harry I’ierpont, describe I as one of the ten convicts who escaped from the Michigan City, In , state prison on Sept 2<>. As ho lay dying after the jail invaders had liberated John I Dillinger, a paroled In liana convict and suspected in an Ohio hank robbery, Sheriff Sarher said the gunman was “Harry Copelan I” but officers were convinced this was a fictitious name As a first -tep in their hunt for Piery ant the officers questionc his brother Fred at L*dpsie, Ohio. He denied knowledge of his brother's recent movements- The officers expressed belief an automobile found on the Pierpont farm vva stationed there by the killer-- Fred said the.car was brought to the farm for repairs several days ago bul that the owners failed to re-

turn.

WASHINGTON. Oct Id President Roosevelt said in an address to the nation tonight that “only through constant education and the dressing I of Ihe i ieals of peace” can those, nail ions threatening the peace of the world by “imperialistic desires” be brought into line with the majority

against such a policy

Addressing the third annual women's conference on current problems j in New York fro n the oval i mm on I the first floor of the white house, Mr. | Roosevelt stressed the need of further | reduction in the cost of local govern-1 rnent by “good business methods and ! the elimination of the wrong kind of] politics." He as-erted the quality of teaching in almost every state could ; be “definitely and distinctly raised.” Noting the conference was discus-:

sing the “crisis in history, - ’ the presi-1 -= dent said there iwas “tw. problems j SHERIFF STARTS ROUNDING UP 1 which can lie hel|)ed by public interest [ GROUP FOILOWING MINE and public discussion”—the iteare of j DISORDERS the world and enhieation as it has been | affected by the depression. j SULLIVAN, Ind., Oct. 14.—Sheriff “The danger to world peace,” he | Cleve Lewellyn of Sullivan county, said, “certainly does not come from j where national guardsmen have been the United States of America As a | j n control for five lays since disornation. we are overwhelmingly against i der.< occurred at a cooperative coal engaging in w ar As a nation we are | mine has started u roundup of perseoking no additional territory at the [sons named in 2."> indictments ree\|K>nse of our neighbors- j turned by the count} grand jury. “The United States (foes not *ek The sheriff had arrested II met.

Raymond Muir, of Boston, pictured after he had l>een appointed head usher of the Executive Mansion. He succeeds "Ike” Hoover who succumbed to a heart attack recently after more than forty years in the

White House,

INDICTED

BY SULLIVAN GRAND JURY

to annex Mexico or an\ part thereof | as t night and said he would wait

ALUMNI LUNCHEON Ot T 20

or to annex Cuba or any part thereof “It is this attitude of the overwhelming majority of our people towards their neighbor-—this complete lack of a national desire for territorial expansion which makes the rest of I the world liegin to understand that the United Stakes h*opposed to war." The president said a “very great majority f ’he it habitants of the world feel the same as we • l i> about territorial expansion or getting rich or powerful at the expense of thet? neighbors” an I that it was “only in the case of such people in the world as -till have inperialistic de..-ires for expansion and domination in their minds or in their hearts that threats to world peace lie ” His appeal for a better grade of teaching went not only to the New York conference, but to college throughout the country Federations of Women’- clubs and nearly 2,000 organizations interested in eduiation. He said ho wanted to enlist the support of all there interests “in the fight we are making on the depres-

sion. w

“When this fight is won,” he asserted, "your problems will be solvedYou can help your government—fedenal. state and local—and we in the government want your help ” fr reducing the cost of local government, he aid. "wo must at the same time have the definite objective in every state and in every -clmol district or restoring the useful functions of c lucatior it least to their pre-de-pression level. “Tile crisis can Ik* met but not in u day or a year and education is a \ital factor in the meeting of it."

until today t" locate the remainder. Ail were charged with rioting. \s the prisoners were taken to the office of Attorney Jesse Bedwell. who arranged for release of each on $5t*0 ’.mnd, they were aeci mpanied by a j steady stream of Sullivan county | K siuents offering- to provide the nec-

essary funds.

J’ro.sc utor Rex Bridwell, who announced the indictments, declined to nuke a statement icgarding the cases investigated by the jury, but it was

reported the inquiry included both the was one

Dr. A. E. Ayler, one of Gree'ncastle’s leading physicians and prominent resident, (Missed aw i\ at 2:30 o’clock Saturday morning of heart trouble in the Methodist hospital at Indianapolis where he had heen for | treatment and observation several

] weeks.

Ame.- Evans Ayler, the -ixl odd ! of William H. and Jane Glad feller Ayler, was lairti in B Itimore, M L, 1 on Dee. 1X70. He attended tha Baltinme city schools and in IXUlt .'ttI tered the Cleveland Me.iical college. The next year he became a student in the Southern Homepathic college it Bait intone, gtaduatug in IXP7 He served as senior interne in the Baltimore hospital and then for twenty-six months was the physician in charge of the National Homeopathic liospitsl at Washington. D. C. He came to Greencastle on August 8, 1899 and had heen closely identified with the business, social and pr-s-fessional life of this city. On June 21, 1X99, Dr. Ayler was united in marriage to Wilhelmina Reoclier, a native of I’oitteray, O- Mrs. Ayler and two daughters Klva and Evelyn sur-

vive

For many year.-, Dr. Ayler was active in the Masonic and other fraternal orders of the city. He was a thirty-second degree Mason of the Scottish Rite; |iast eminent commander of the Knights Templar, and had been affiliated with the Elk.-. Kniglds of Pythias, the Eagles and the Junior Order of American Mechanics. Professionally he was a member of thu American Institute of ID meopathy. Independent in politics, capable a- » doctor, ;nb always teady to help the needy or those in di-tress, Dr. Ayler was one of Grrenraxtle’s outstanding and well liked citizens. Dr Ayler's flower garden around his home on east Washington street,

of the beauty spots of

TY LIBRARY RECORDS SHOW DECIDED Di:inirII c

INCREASE IN NUMBER OF READERS

There u more interest in books now ; particular time. Sine n..\"i •" ^

»n a few years ago us is shown by ; written for an immodiate puipo-t '' 1 -V I with kochmit, suffered cuts almut

P«ru *1 of records in the city libr- few. live A t.vel is the expri .->i m 1 hj| ( . head.

ty Mrs Thomas states lhat books a period in which people were s.tnj \| or , pviM Wit . returned to jail by irrulated over 83.000 times last year ! and those "f twenty years ag > ,ir! j m ot(.r policeman Roy New gent hrtvas the circulation was 23,030 ten very different (tom the one t"' I c „ u |,i make anangements to i Ts ago. * Modem novel* are truer to life, san-1 ^ fjm , Kochmit stated he J

would file attachment proceeding*

Del’auw university alumni attending the sfate teachers convention in Indianapolis next week, will hold n luncheon in the Claypool betel F ri-j day noon. Pre-ident Oxnam wbll pre- j side and efforts ate lK>ing made ti have Prof. F. Tilden, professor of I comparative literature; William A. j Wirt, superintendent of schools at J Gary, and Pr< f. Waltei Bundy, |>ro- ,

feasor of Bible tit DePauw, a* speak-1 CHEMICAL TESTS SHOW FAII ors on the pr gram. These lunth- ' I RE 441 PI* \NE Vt AS NOI

\ir Urash Dur To Explosives^™

1 the

Greencastle during the early (ring, and he .ielighted in niakitig it attractive for hi- friends and those who enjoyed something beautiful from it natural standpoint in passing his

home.

The funeral services will lie held from the home at ten o'clock Monday morning, with Pr if. H B Goubh in

Forest Hill

Dr. Edin^toii is Numnl Serretary

death of Frank Stabler, run down by un automobile at the Starburn cooperative mine, and the expl sion at the home of Charles Fox Sunday

night.

Streets of downtown Sullivan have

been virtually deserted except for the national guardsmen, some with fixed bay. nets, who patrolled the district

t>, prevent any assemblages in viola- charge Burial will b"

Lon of tin' military orders imposed Abbey,

on the county. | ——-

Frank Barnhart, a member of the

United Mine Workers of America, ap- . peared Friday afternoon with two men who said they saw shots which were fired at t le Starliuin mine. The men, Hugh Wilson and Fay Miller, I both of Sullivan, -aid the first shots were fired by men working at the corqiei itive shaft and volunteered to appear before Ihe grand jury. Nati mil guard and county officials were

notified of their statements. Union sympathizers have objected

to the plan of cooperation of the cooperative mines on the ground they do not confotm to uni. n wxige agree-

ments.

Nearly all union mines in Sullivan county had resumed operations I Friday for the first time -ilice the I guardsmen wore called to the dotrict last M' nday. The union men k iii protest against presence of troops, but voted to return to

work.

A special guard w: ordered about

eons ate held each year during the teachers eonv. ntbin and approximately inn Del’auw graduates teaching in

the public - hoolg, attend.

U \USE OF IR At.EDY

BLOOMINGTON. Ind.. Oct. 14. — Dr. J. A. Nieuwland of Notre Dime university was elected president of the Indiana Academy of Science last night at Indiana university. Dean M. L. Fisher. Purdue, Was chosen vice president; Dr. R. 1 • Krisener, .Butler, secretary; Dr. Will Morgm, Indiana Central college, assistant secretary; Dr. Paul Weatherwax, Indiana university, tr.-a-urei; Dr. W. E. Bdingtim. DePauw, pre., secre tary, and Dr. S. A. Cain, Indiann

university, editor.

Tae academy of science opened its forty-ninth annual meeting at I. U. Thursday afternoon and will . lose it today wit htiie Nolle Dame Indiana

bx'thull game.

The following live members • f the

the cur.house here alter Biig- G**Ti | a.-sociation were announced a ucad D. Wray Del’rez and ( ipt. Charles , e|ny (; e( , rR ,- Spitzer, Purdue; Metiaughey of the national guard had [ Alfrp(J Wabi-h: I he® Just.

The demand for non-fiction books is trrasing but as yet it has not equal that nf fiction Immediately after * World War book* on international latbois and travel were in constant •tWqnd [hiring the |>a»t winter the nand |>y men for books of econotn8 * n 1 invention increased. Women Id’eared interested in books of. bi- * r, l'hy. history, and handicraft,* c *’ a ' nig making and domestic lfn<p More serious books are now •f by everyurfe fn>m high sehool

e up.

'hie l(p.,k i H not in <demand all the n| e because there are very few inasfliieces in novels. Novels, like songs

Modern novels are truer to life, san ‘ or, franker, and iu<-r« practical.

New novels at

«rt! : • .. .. “Christ and Human Suffering

.Stanley Jones

“The Way

not

“The Progt du Maurier.

( ity Ldir.u.v i Morgan's truck.

Beyond”—Jeffrey Far-

NAME HEAD OF BANK

20 Years Ago IN GREENCASTLE

CHICAGO Oct. II I). B. Colyi r, vice president of the United Air Lin*-, in a statement last night aid ‘■hat laboratory tests at Northwestern university showed that the crash nf one of the company's three-mile-a-nrinute passenger planes Tuesday nignl was caused “by a high explo-

1 ecu informed attoriivy* in Sullivan i

of Julius"—Daphne

i I-e-lii' Hamaker who*recently sold J *ive.

’INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 14. — Earl : his farm ju-t north of town is mov-i B ts from

Craw ford of Milton today was ap-( Ing here today.

Notre Dame; E. R. Smith. DePauw,

were preparing t. petition for an ,| c. E. Adams. Indianapidis. of habeas corpus to Main release of] S|)l ,progiam inPaul Bedwell, Clarenae Kidge and | ( ., u |ed j >r w M Bhinchurd and l»r. Floyd Floener, detained for question- ( . Yuru . ker| |^p MUW university, urn. _ -..

DINOSAURS ONCE^OAam^COUNTY^^ RES(Dt))TS

“Mil's Bishop''

rich

in his Bogom”

Miller.

"Master of

Bess Street Aid-

“No Second SpriiuP' Janet Boith"The Farm"— I'ouis Bronifid*-

11 «1^7p^rthr.i7«Tf| “One More River” John GalsworI’le.and conform to a need of ajthy. • • A a.*

the wteckage were eol-

loitsd by federal investigators work-

„ iminted hea( , , f the i'l'i'diana" branch | Keesj. Mats, y returned from a visit | ir.'t under Melvin H. Purvis. h»a-l of

... o- 1- •** -

'Appointment was made by L. B.; A. Th; op were visitors in Indiana-1 the laboratory for tests.

('lore, chairman of the board of di-, polls

rectorS of the Louisville bank.

(raw-ford was speaker of the hotise j Roachdale on liusinoss. ,f the 1933 Indiaiai general pssembly u * h

Caroline

JaltM" ,.Mizj de I* 1

William E. G«wen of Madison t wnship lecently found the tooth of m dinosaur, th.. big animals that roamed the earth about a million years ago, and the t "th is now on display at the Owl drug store. It is

and bad been prominent in .■rftit: politics for many y^ears

a banker by prdess^m.

ItemoHe is

Whether the explosion was effused 1 more like a rock than a tooth, hut

("iitries McGaughev was here from j by a time *omb as some'investigator-i the full outlii the t<>’th still re-

theorized was not.determined, ( olyer I mains and it seen^ t" *’V a perfeet Henry Prevo spent the day in Terre j ••ifl- • l-^iximen. !• Seven iHa-otis. were killed as the! Mr. (.owen found the t "th recently

Mi. and,Mrs. E.

Chicago f"*' « day*. •

• Seven |M.jsona # were killed as the* Mr. Gowen found the t nth recently

Harris are in , giant aiff liner Hound front Newark, [while digging gravel out of a hank

(txaitinued on Page Two; Ike students of the dinoszur state it

I k" students of the

roatr.e*! the earth about a million jeats ^gn an.l has b'en extinct since then, but it*is claimed the fines* oils now come from the decayed vegetable matter <>f that time. With the finding of the tooth of this dinosaur in Putnam county, many are of the '•pinion that othei seetiona of its skeleton or body are to be found in this vicinity, bringing positive proof that this county was probably over-run a million years ago • by this kind of animal life.

£

i