The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 October 1933 — Page 3

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iSSIFIED ADS For Sale— h mvi ,le Udie Aid WV* 1 . T HiniSM* Saturxiay,

It

FOR ^SALE: Poland China Boars. Isaac ,J. Ha.mmnnd. Pho* s<i, (; r p Pn .

1933.

(Ireoncwtlc Rale

h|()N' at

Oct. 21. Some g I 01 el' livestock. {,,,, • h11

L ' li?

Wayne I^inlierper for' Crazy Beveridge street. Free

■1-, 3

phone 42.VK.

1H-:U

h|py 1 f Presbyterian church a f sale. Saturday tnom(I o’clock, at Hirt’s Electric 18-3t. L lLB \t my home ill Palls, Saturday. Oct. 21, 1933, [ , 1 ,misistintr of household ■and 1 'her articles. Della Davis, 18- 3p SU.F' ' Kalamazoo,heating „ ^ ..id condition. Phone 193-X. 19- 2fr SALE—I. H. C. repairs, |:,,nir , mower sickle, was $3, in,i\v. r tonjrue, was $4, now Closing «ut on all repairs. |. hovela. Plow pointa, 1|| a 0tries, (Ireencastle, Ind. Tues-Fri-Sat-tf U.l- Kureka electric swt'' , |iWl th attachments. Furniture i idt oquare’. Phone 20- 2t

FOR SALE: Sanitary C # t, »2.0(h } , informed into a place of telephones.

traffic efficers, paTed streets, mod-

JHE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTIe, INDIANA, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1933.

Furniture Exchangg, square. PBone 170-L,

side of

20-2t

—Wanted—

WANTED—Any kind of dead stock Call 278, Greencastle. We pay all charges. John Wachtel Co 24-tf

WANTED AGENTS: R.nps, Jewelry, Medicines. Send ten tents in coin only. Will send you details and formula how to make money agts. meth- | od. J. C. Admite Sales Sendee, Brazil, Indiana. .T)-3ts 1

em plumbing, and elertri?ally lighted homes, according to T, f C. Jaffe, «f

Jerusalem, here on a visit.

dnicy grapefruit has replaced dusty wato, starved plants, arongea a re thriving amid the stumps where the lurks had cut trees, ar#l field c*ops are growing where nothing could live ;

lb years ago.

“Even tho Dead Sea is a live sda now, said Jaffe. “Progress everywhere in Palestine has been most ' marked. There were 57,000 Jew.s thi*re 15 years ig..; now theer are mo/,, than ! tO;lu.ip. t., thh last thiee nn.iiths, more than 3,000 German } ws have oom<t to live there, and so grerit hi- been th- demand for ad-

ml salon to P . t hat ' We have

NOTICE: To all who owe Camp- no * kad the mean- to accommodate |

—Miscellaneous—

Itell & Ogles. Please, call and settle accounts-before Nov. 1. Sa\, us calling on you. Campbell & Ogle, South End Elevator. ° P2-tf

FOR RENT: furnished, c.t 435-iK.

them all. We now have 136 agricultural organisations in Palestine, with iO.iiOO farmers, most 0 f them univer>it\ graduates and white collar men. "We are making rapid progress in Die citie-, too. In Tel-Aviv, in the ' last 10 yours, the population has gone

or 4 room, house, ! U p from 1,130 to more than 60,000.” j

unfurnished. Call

20-2t

—For Rent—

THE cndpdgStjfflpnt

DANCE at Banner Club Saturday night. Music by Mack’s Midnight ; Ramblers. Admission 15 cent- ip i

Golf F.ndiiranre t hantp Dead EDINBURGH. Scotland, (UPi

Bni-e Sutherland, who mtide a worlds

SAND \M> W ASTE PI I TO ROUT | gold enduran e n , „rd, is dead. Suth-

j erland itf 1925 played 14 rounds of

MON I REAL (UP) Jerusalem, 10 j golf in 23& hours. Acetylene lamps yet 1 rs ago a land of sand ami waste | and advance watchers helped him to and the abode of the jackal, has Iteen j play in the darkness.

a

By FRANCIS WALLACE

A GREAT FOOTBALL ROMANCE

COPYRIGHT 19JO, BY PRAHCfS WALLACE — 1 DISTRIBUILD BY KUYO hiATURLS SYNDJUATD, I.YC-

! I m\ 5.

SYNOPSIS d Wynne aspires to the higher p in life so he leaves his posim a steel mill and works his ttuough Old Dominion College, uitceeds creditably. Under |h Barney Mack, Ted becomes |ttback on the Blue Comets, only one game during the i His only enemy at school is Stone, who considers Ted hts ar. Both boys are rivals for the id wealthy and spoiled Barb Pillowing a misunderstand ird ignores Barb, but his ^hn are always of her even i witt, lovely Rosalie Downs Ic Christmas dance. Barb slights id.sa.ic tries to make him unlni.i lie has his ideals centered t c wi„ng girl Later in the In a Ted lot the first time, res r. w lovely Rosalie is Days kiidv companionship follow. < puzzled. Back at school, i (noughts return to Barb. Then lets Betsy They are ettcepi!ly fond of one another, but miK he is not in a position to | - Ted discontinues seeing In the spring. Barney lectures auall. t MAPI EK XXIII’rlk.. Shakespeare.” |, i ..t died across the campus l td -raled hts ear« with his tips and knit moving toward )ovi'i Other- passing him sintl-

(oy—you're a sensation," Pidge 'rlcd as 1 rd threw bis book ti.r t.,l>le and pounced on the lor a stretih

uy off "

so ktddin’-Red Mike read i. oi Steel' in class to the )in1 this tnoining and I hear the ili'.ilirs ate going' to have you

Ik to them."

l ey oil Pnlge. you've got to be

III' level about this."

5i' lit dope you're a cognesliur some kind ol a cog around t nov \utt have enteied the inb'lul life oi the cotmiiunity." Ivjv pot to promise to put woe it they're gooline me." kinfing w is a deadly remedy ‘li New Do'itiniuii u^td in det riiLrced crai'-ums and tliscip I fit li-neii, scphoiito*ea, joniots r"^*s who, lor any teu«oi. *'rc convinced that they had ■ ae tfvod at anything at »lf Li* in ■'* was Hatteicd, fawn-d i hecnp.e n u-n tly p.-wn'ai - ced o I 11>» »u • * (itshSkty, t-' in ni. Mien sj .it divelopht* ms )" .1 pLyitif quatt t l ari—tl'cti, r 1 ' hi Ind .clttrwd the tnnvl h 1 lunatio'i. th? bnbbie was f *'e i and tit. i;iol was either

['•'I unfit

|> l i: -1 w.jtfn Ha sonnet, 'aM witti it, ,,m lortething of his 1 am! that of the f ''S t l ater he recog r'* " ' Ins rv.tc'ion to the at1 life was mak'iig upon •" ' n tr..-...lion at ;ll» mo* r •' ha 1 Vi'-.S 'll the fornt of r "i • 1 knew nothing of the I i. .cr’t ,f • cut.ets <•: their a«'.i,>- | ’ v •>» i-.nnc: it wr.s wiif 't 1 ad said i, way 0 'O-r-

■ * .in * • -.i

I i Vi.nw whai he meant. *' 'll 'lUcd in tlw tcltnol v w't' ly Prcdfc.ors ^nd tad it- had been stopping V' 1 '' t' 1 him. always ex l ' -'npi'-c that a football

II : '| write such'a gent The

■ (Id*I tlv reached the " k gave Igtle heed to.son-

tation was the opening gun ol a goofing salute. The roar followed shortly. The door opened and a flock of young men in blue sweaters with gold monograms surrounded him. congratulating him effusively. Big Pat, in a voice heavily laden with inherited brogue, announced that the Young Men's Shakespeare dub would now come to order; the meeting would be addressed by Brother Brute. Brother Brute conversed in a flowery falsetto upon the merits of “Man of Steel." the most recent literary contribution from Brother Wynne. Brother Wynne was then requested to read his sonnet l hey lilted him to a table, cheering

shrilly

“Modesty forbids me to read ntv own stuff." be declared. "1 only want to say that I owe everything to my roommate who is my ghost-

writer."

It warmed Ted to have the boys goof him a bit; he felt less the lone wolf, less the field general, more akin to the mob Authority had always gravitated to him; his authority was usually respected; he was recognized as a man of thought, one layer ahead of the mob mentally—but seldom chosen to tule Pat was a natural leader: down among the mob and standing out, always one step ahead of them in action and not concerned with whether he was being followed--and they trusted him Pidge was of the flowing wine of humanity itself; giving rather than taking; elbowing nobody aside, interfering with nobody s ambition. The mob loved him. Stone was the tyrant, neither lovd. respected nor trusted, who ruled. when possible, by force, chicanetv or deceit Ted. destined to higher things thah any of them, found something all of them to envy 'ipike Parker sent "Man of Steel" the Tribune as a short teature story and received a request for longer article on led* experience

the mill

"It’s the bunk, of course." Spike said, "but it's bunk like thia that

makes all-Americans "

The story went out; and cartoons

i knew that Pat * satu-1 moving along

Ted Wynne. Footballs Man of Steel, fitted much space in the news p.ipets during the ofl-«ea«on. The Lon Age reprinted the poem

and i’ eventually found its wav to t!,» bulletin boards ot the Riverside

Plant „ . “Sm.trt bov you have, the men

told Ted's fathet. "and a good man

the mill, too."

The cider Wynne took credit for all Long ago he had become an t „ pert nn football; a man to whom -uperiutendents stopped and talked, •rckiitR kernel* of tns’dfc stun Ted was amused and pleased with hit dad't new attitude It smoothed thtngt at home, and it Ins parents a compelling new ji,(> rest in a lilt barren ol »uch It cave them a reflected « ory which he knew they loved H'» mother. ■ Hiring football season at least now enjoyed preeminence m the barki..nce confabs the neighbor ladies

•eM every morning

The university slept in mountainous quiet Frogs croaked, crickets chirped, animals eomplamed near the farm home „ a motor d,slurbrd them: tluee sombre senttnels-jp, the dome, chapel spue and a tall brick st.ck-le*>'^ agamat , ,ky

from which start

clear

JA’vnne, a ,on * ^

hung low and

the rq^d.

shadow

ooked to

the stars and smiled. Hi thought that if the stars had a sense of humor they must smile, also, at th* Lilliputian stumbling along in the gloom, stubbing hts toes on the stones beneath while searching the unattainable for the intangiblet, thinking of his todays, yesterday* and tomorrows. He wondered desperately what it is all about. But others had looked at the stars and found answers. Perhaps the big blinkers were anxious to tell what they knew —if the gazer kept his mind off the ground long enough to comprehend, if he looked less in women's eyes, those brighter, more enticing light- (has he—because they cannot trust the men who look, perhaps’ It's a tough old world down here: what do you say up there' led turned in from the road towards Byrne Hall It was alter twelve and the door* would be locked—if the night watchman lei him m there would be complication- with the Prefect of Discipline in the morning—missing the laM car was no excuse—Pepper was tough. He stepped behind a tree to let two men go by, believing them to be watchmen. He recognized the Brute and Jack Boomer and called to them. "How're you getting in’” "What the hell are you doing out’” the Brute whispered "Pat « window's working " Pat lived in the basement floo' known a- the subway, domicile ol "kept" athletes and wealthy heru worshipper* I he window, level with the ground outside, was protected by a screen which was tailored inside The Brute reached through a hole in the screen, unhooked the latch, swung back the screen, opened the window and eased Ins bulk through as cautiously as a cal Boomer followed, then

Ted.

A chair had been thoughtful!* placed beneath the window by Fat so that the night hawks might not disturb his honest slumber. He snored calmly a* they crept hr, opened the door and stepped into the darkened hall where one weak bulb burned, moving softly so *» not to disturb the prefects. It was the system When Pat * window was detected and repaired another one would be open and the word would go round among the regulars—so went the ancient ..od honorable custom of "skiving which operated thusly since liefoia Barney Mack had been a aftd'nt Ted stole through the corridor*, up the creaking »teps, and at rived safely in hts own room. He ««a exhilarated with the success of t » first skive, felt more human more in touch with the regular* • Bucking the Uw had a tasty lure. Conditions in the Valley were poor that summer The mill wa* shut down; the coal mines were og strike, unemployed from these major industries took what few ioba might have bee# available on the railroads or glass factories. Thera was no work to he had. “Never mind." his dad had said, “take it easy You’ll have a tough

season this year.

led had forgotten how to take it easy He had always been pushing ahead. Now there was nothing

to push

Sleep h* le in H'* morning: * ,ay up late at night; afternoons at the rivwt beach: swimming, paddling a canoe, fallen 10 » le «P • vtf • b- ' i,k •Jdlenea* • • ■ Leg*. . , , iTe *• Cectioaetf)

TANK-CAR TO YOl SERVICE

Bonded GASOLINE

QUICK STARTING

'fomethinq fizilex''

.ilk -

J*

HOME OIL COMPANY

''li,

685 N. Jackson St.

Greencastle, Indiana

ISLAM) EMPIRES I WGl.F. IN' iti .it, .h.pan -tv- ulnm-t unlimited night arid • Tented fir-t tin I seciwt gen enm 1 -, 23 t" 16. while in a tilt BATTLE FOR SOU TH WIKRI- ' |e.-sibilities in the South American teams if that Morgan mun'.y sch "il hetw i ti the fir.-t teams the Belle

( \ N BUSIN I "

LONDON, (UP)—Jstl an and Great Britain, whose relation# have ber ime increasingly strain'd through <'<•'*• noniir rivalry, are |in paring to fight a gigantic trade d iel for the rich Smith American n ■ '

sphere 1 (ending the phenomenally successful Japanese trade drive are the big textile indu-tries. Through high efficiency, cheap labor and a steadily declining currency they have made trenenlous strides. Today, with their

In a* preliminary tilt Coach Noble I Union boys nosed out an 18 to 16

Cox’s second leant defeated the Para- victory.

KATHRYN KELLY IN JAIL

Already <>n the \ rire of tqien wo- I modem machinery and methods, they i

nomic strife, the is! . empire of the Fast and the Wes! romise the hit ieie.si commercial -n iggle the world jlus- seen since tariff nd boycotl replaced -hells arid cannon. At the moment industrialist- representing Japan and Great Britain are a eting In Simla and London in m effort to smooth nit their quarrel b' fore the breach widens irreparably Fnw observers, however, entice h the i gatherings and great chance of u<

| cess.

I Japan, consistently capturing trad' 1 ft mi Great Britain uid thi In' ■<! I States in every Oriental market, now is turning toward So nh America. Fin rd with the loss of In r huge gain, in In lin by recent | rohibUive tariff-. and convinced that Bi tain never again will allow her to expand in th di

NOTICE OF tDMINISTI. VI ION Notice is hereby given that the un- • ersigned has been appointed l>\ the Judge of the Circuit c urt of Putnam (Y.unty, State of Indiana, Administrator of e-tate of Silas A Hays late of Putnam County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to he solvent. Lillian Hays Ector, Administratrix Oct 18, 1933 Attorney M J. Murphy Cause No. 7576. John W Herod, Clerk of the Ifiitnam Circuit Court 13 3t-

can undersell any f >reign competitor A va-t number of minor industries springing up in Japan using the .ime method an i enterpri-e as the !' \tile mill- For these, Japan’s textiles serve a .i we Il’c for opening n -w ;

narked-

Hard hit in the early year- of the lepression- Japan i- climbing hack peetucuhirK outrii lancing m naii iis in the world wide effort to re'•hieve former prosperity levels In 1870 with experts of 11 1-2 million on, she was n il even a minor factor n world tra '•>. By 1925 her exports ind risen to 2,."'i'i million yen an adance of 15,HIM) per cent. From that h-ul they had declined ■ 1,147 million yen at the'end of IP.'II when -ho abandoned the gold standard after vryiriv fora long period o kerqi tho yen w rth 50 cents (U g.)

in gold.

Today the yen - worth less than JO cents yold .ind Jill ieelining In her first year iff the gold standard Japan scored a 2 |ier cent increase in her ex pot's, and so far this year has maintainol that rate of progress.

BIT.I F I NION MIN-: Belle Union high school basketball t ao s invaded Paragon Wednesday

Kathryn Kelly, wife of George (“Machine Gun") Kelly, who received a i life sentence for her part in aiding her husband! kidnap (TibHe- Ursehel, is shown h< re in the workhouse at CincinnMl, Ohio, where she has started sen - | ing her term.

NOTRE DAME

HONORS

MARCONI

MU B E OF \DMINIST RATION Notice is hereby given that the ua ’ersigned hus been appointed by tTn Judge of the Circuit Court of Pul nam County fttate of Indiana, Admin- , istmter of the estate of l.c nald 1 Wilson, late of Putnnm County, dc- j reared. Said estate Is supposed to lie solv ent. Matilda J. Wilson. Administrator. • Oct. 12. 193!!. Cause No. 7574. Attorney, Sutherlin and Futherlin. John W. Herod, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court. * l‘2-3t I

wsmsmMm'

• THE AMERICAN ^SECURITY co. • Gians & Ilisiimnls. Phone >8 im*E. Washington SI.

•I^ft to^

Rev. John F

Matvujii’s honyr

utht: Guglielni" Marconi,, __

O'Hara, vice president of Notre Dame 1 nivtr-ity, at luncheon given at the university

father of wirel^ Notre Dame l *

Later the invent.a' was made an It ,

Bishoy Juhn K. Noll of Fort W-vne, and the

tv, a

ry doctor of laws.