The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 November 1933 — Page 3

THE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 13. 193).

THE AMERICAN SECURITY co. Loans & Discounts Phone 9tf E. WoshiTiKton St.

harm Strike Figure

lassified ads —For Sale--C.,, h ,. ;i | fat Jersey and i , n 0 |stein heifers at Sackett v itichman sale, Wednesday. IP,-2|i

r :an;

!j.iiK y A I. F.: l‘J-8 I’ontiae 4-door llfjo I indue coupe; 1MI Ford all in A-1 condition; also one V10 |ii, i door sedan cheap. See ..uli I Thiinas at McCammon's jj.,,|' U.K Kuroc male hotr. one ,,l . Paul Hurst. 13-lp. L()l( SAI.K: Poland China Males, yoarlinii- and Sprintr pip's, feedinp P O \l Thomas, Morton. Ki-2|)

VLB: Imii'k David Ap|.|.-s. ’ „ii like an old fashion wincsan, w j|| like Kinjf Davids, florid to .iiiil r ">k Also other pood varietMi< ullouph Orchards- 13-tf. |] n|; SAI.K: 10 head sheep. 1 ,rte > l.ull, would tra<r for hay. ■f (iillna, Cloven!ale- 13-3p.

1 01! SAI.K- A 6 and <i year old fresh soon, flood Jersey cows. | . pen . FtHmorei. lS-3p-t III OOMMIMliOMCarS p OK l!KAI. FJSTATK—The unicned r. nnissioner, on Novermber 1933, and from day to <lay thei-e-i. r until sold, will offer at private ! tin- Janes farm west of the City rush hid- will he received at the of the undersigned and at the >e „f Mat- J. Murphy, Atty. , \liieri K. Williaras, Commissi.mer. 3t

7i)|t SAI.K: Turkeys, dressed or ,I Few choice for hreeders. Mrs. I Hanks Fillmore. 0-8-10-13-15-17-fip

jUK SAI.K: A new Rrooder House, r.lo -ale the day of my public W P. Sackett. 9-13-21.

Wanted—

P|i UTI'O Five or \ ro.im niodV odei n him .• v ith if B bam, i barn pn fere Ml) Ir In irond location. 'I'elephonp IP

W’TKD: Housework of anykiini i • vork hj >' perleneed Addn-- Box No. 44, Bannei Bvr 13-2t.

•il wood cutting with a saw that dc. 30 cents a cord. I furnish g». sl i nil and will go any distance, nl FIoit. 1! 2. One-half mile -outh Mi Olive on the Manhattan road. Ip

.WANTED—Any kind of dead stock ^11 278, flreencastle. We pay all John Waehtel Co 24-tf

—Lost—

Governor Clyde Herring, of Iowa, who, although in sympathy with the farmers, announced that the “State will step in” to put down disorder* arising through the farm holiday movement if local police are unable to cope with f he situation.

W.C.T.I! LEADER SAYS LIOIOR W AR JUST BEGI N

Timers Muintain IVrlccI Record; Rap Evansville <H.I* flOl 1) FOOTBAM. TF,\M I UOI N( F.S IM KIM.F. ACES ID 34-6 S4 OKF. . . 4 ' 1 , y” No : F- foot ha'! squad still remains one of th ■ few undefeated, untied an I unscored oi igcregat'ons in the entire country a m ult of the inipiessive 34 to 0 victory over Kvansville’s Purple Aces dewn at the Pocket City Saturday aftem on. Ih 1,1 scoiide In the opening pe liod hy the downstate el.wen. the Tigers led by Bradley and Volkman, unooiked a -ensitional offensive hive ♦ hat netted tu , touchdowns in the •e:ond (|uniter and the half ended,

14 to n.

Two more touchdowns were -ollect ed in the thirl frnmry a< the DePauw huski'-s hattere I away at the Evans ville line and ; Iso executed several forwatd p.i-se that resulted in 1 n r

HffMaffwaf McCutchan. Ri feree Dick Miller. Pn^iire *- Birch #ayh lleacl lie,-man Vaughn Russell. *

* j; V I I'KDAY’S (, \Vl i.s STATE CCLLEGES Purdue |<1; Notre Dame 0. Indiana 7; Chicago 7 (tie). Washington (St,, l.iiui.-l 3tl; Butler

12.

DePauw 34: Evansville 0. Hanover 2(1; Wah -h 12.

Fr.'nklin ti; Ball ' t te t; i tied. Valparaiso 33; Detioit ('ity’eollege

0.

Manchester 1.3; h' tie Dame B 13

(tie.)

FILLMORE WINS Friday night the Fillmore Card- f's inals turned back an invading Amo k team to the tune n(^29 to 18. Fillmore - ied at the, half, 13 to 7. The game was * fast, the gall going from one end to < he other hut Fillmore managed to iend throughout. In a curtain raiset the Fillmore It. 'earn lost to the Amo econd team, : .‘.‘l to 17. Wednesday,*N v. 15, Fillmore goes ! ■ Rainhriduty to play the .Pointers I arpl on Friday, Nov. 17, they will tie Host to the Kusselville quintet.

LaGuardias After Victory

.BKKNhl ASII.E F\\s ENJOYED I'l Bill N!>! Pi D V VI F. I. \ VI K

(By Ida I! al W.C.T.U, Press I

Wise, President NationWritten forthe Unite I

I Ahout 25 flreenca th I iravi d the iold went • , Notti | lame-Purdin i South Bend Saturi ! iH\ i n a raro fo :thi, i Twico during the I * he i aging Notre 1 1 j me y./id line and < .

gains In the last period, reserve; J 1 ll! lue in u sir helped in garte ring a fifth t u h-|a (vantage af t down and the ti! ended with the 1 ' '' *' '” r ,n threi •al collegianf h • eg « 3 1 to 0 ad N 1)lime il!l 1 t( Vtwt Igi 1 - ,ce ** In six games played, the Old fl„h’i d’h'^unities, and it

squad has piled up a total if 122 paints and the opposition has yet to cross tl Methodist goal line. Pe

Pauw’s record i- a . follows':

GOLD EXCHANGE RESERVE UP AT(X'KIlOl.M ( l P) The Ww ilish gold and foreign exchange reserve I lias inenused 3(Hr0(Mi,tl0o kronir. ! i' about 175,000,000 this year says the Bank of Sweden. I Is now 720. 000,000 kroner, as compared with 99 000.000 in gold and only 33 football ■ - 0 1 ' *' ! "" when the country went off the gold

standard.

i that t e.e marlly eon ' took dvantoge t

I ri -ii ideven.

i and aw the i ithall game at I and all wer|

feat.

I’unlue held

-'‘team on it - : Notre Dame i way. Purdue 1 1 nks and won "ward passes

luek when

d lost their

t liesc break .

Purdue te<un ■ d played th 1

1 PHILADELPHIA (IP1 Slat records show that 50.287 motor vehicles were involved in 32.091 acet- ■ etits, causing the death of 1,537 lersons. Injury to 5 1.214, and propii'l\ damage estimated a: $3.(i3B.40n. dining the tlrst nine mmitlts of the ! ■ n )„ Pennsylvania. The death toll | was an increase of .05 per rein mer

: the same period last yeai.

Mayor-elect Fierello II. I.nfluardia. pictured with Mrs. Knfluardia as they acknotvh dg. the uimultuous ovation accorded tlif>m on their aridvMl nt the ban'iind to celebrate the Fusion victory in New York's municipal election. Th • Mnyot elect shews no trace of the strain usual aficr such a tough oamtMiign.

10ST On the square, Opera hagwatch. Pink and white chain- He* rd Return t° Banner. 13-14-l7-3p

I' T Wrist Watch, 15 00 rewanl teiiimed to Banner office !3-lt.

- Misoellaneons—

NOTICE — Will patrons please Tir hill which has been mailed to "n when they call to pay accounts, ecru -tie Exchange Indiana Assokitcj Telephone Comore.tian. tf

M l Nsi.; \(T (>| NT OF VI,I OT-

Ml NT OOMMin i.F.

liiem $115.00 'ileaire 53.89 l*rk litre ^ 1(1.09 "stagp . 7.58 I iit-t Puhli iti n 103.09

$313 37

I Alienee Account «f S«*cr«dar4 '■r Diem DhOO ■ lilc.ige 2J8)'

1146 j

I.' pen He Account of t (immunity

(donmittees

Per Diem Mileage

'"It,m 10.00 7.75

"more 13.00 ' ‘nklin 19.00 11 1 "cn.-tle-Madtson ....11.00 ,lli a ,...10.00 1 "'rson o.ott * mi e 9 00 ;iKs 6ll 9.00 K ( Imer l ile Warien 8.00

$>♦8 00 $05.1(1

,:,! M Ton LONGiDEN, Treasurer. Luiei; ORA A. DAY, President

''"men County

•ninitteo

CHICAGO, (UP)- The repeal of the 18th amendment may look like the end of the nad to many, hut to ihe W. C. T. U. it simply i- an episode in tin* w ar against man's greatest and oldest enemy intoxicating drink. Prohibition never was an end in itself; hut rather a method of dealing with the liquor traffic. The nation had tried every other method; al' failed. We believed prohibition to he the best method; if we can not have prohibition we, will tiy t , reduce the evils of liquor to a minimum by some it her meth <i. We will start all over again in n new and improved campaign of education. It will he ,-cientific and, I ladieve, a (equate But education in alcohol, and its effect, must keqp step with progres-. A hundred years ago we could talk about “horrible examples’’ and show startling charts indicating the effect ,f liquor on the human stomach; hut c lueatiomd methods have changed and progres.-ed. !', uny We show what sobriety d es for life; for happiness, Tciiracy, scholarship, athletics, et a Ameri a must adopt a total abstinence goal; if it adopt( a eoderat • drinking goal the peo»1 ■ "f" losi. Ali drunkards got their start in moderate drinking. Against public school temperance education will he launched an otganizftl and skilled pr paganda in favor of moderate drinking. This will he a part of the ( nmercial advertising of the liquor interests. 1 am in favor of curtailing liquor advertising: it should he prohibited. It should no, be permitted in newspapers, magazines, billboard-, radio, or anywle r

else.

There will be a part of the pecqib who will opp se the government <>g any state w hich is in the liquor bu • ness. It is that way in Panada. There the liquor manufacturers are in poli ties. There is u strong dry movement slowly hearing low n on the Uanadim liquor systems, trying to reduce ‘.tie quantity sold. Wherever prohibition laws remain, the W T. U. will fight to ret an them. We expect to lie opposed by liquor politics. Wo will tiy to vo e the doon and the liquor business o it of as mu ’h of the United States as we can. On the other hand we exia ct to see the liquor business try to vot' the liquor business into as much I’nitedState s territory as it can. The great need of the h ,uf is a re- \ ival of civic consciousness. The V\ . C. T. U. is trying its best to arouse num t their full dr'y with respee' to the ballot.

9 Ball 8tat,

(1

28 Earlham

0

13 Manehostei

0

2*1 Franklin .

II

34 Evan.-ville

0

122 .... Totals

0

This record i- without

doubt the

best a Del’iiuw i',, (bull team has established in the history of the school, t Much credit P r the success of the squad i due to Neal, the head coach. 1 •ir ! to Don van “Tubby’’ Moffett, thleti director, who also finds time to spend an hour or two ea"h day assisting in the coaching. The boys on the squad, of ourse, deserve a world if praise for their cooperation in practice an I training, which has broug t the state’s secondary championship pi actieally within theii

grasp.

Saturday, the Tigers clash with their triditi nai foe, Wabash, at ('rawfordsville in the oldest college griditon fend west of the Allegheny meuntains. The lineup and summary of the evansville contest follows: DePauw (341 Evansville (0)

H. Setters To 1 ()|H‘n !No\rmluT 22

i

BROW NSBl'Kfl TO I I UN ISM OP POSH ION IN OPI NKR FOR | 11GF.R ( I Its

flreenca'tie's Tiir< " < !>-, runners-] i'j|i in the state high il basket ball | linal- ,t tin- Hutlei fiehlhouse last , Vlareh, will o|ien tie r t", 3 1 cam-1 'paign on Wqdnesda.. evening, Nov. I 22, with the ta-t Btownsimrg (piintet I

1 forming the opposit

i New names and n, u fae, ^ will o i * ! pose the ( uh squad tins winter as graduation claimed lb Xnally, Hurst, Godfrey, Hammond and Campb*-!!, | j the boys that put fl au a-tle on the map in the basketball w rid for several years Coach < iarle\ Edmonson ! has been working >o a gr,,e.p of last , ear’s “It" team placer- and one or] two subs fr un lasp, season's varsity

Volkman. . McC’ill ug‘3 . Simpson. . L rtz

Hartline Rothman

Kay Bishop \v Bradley

Frihley.

LE LT LG C . Rfl RT RE <i KH im F .

Pollard Banko Thehy Johnson Knglebrecht . . . . Crosby Hostettcr ....... Taylor Kewtight Connor . SuhHieinricb

Score by periods: DePauw <• Evansville (i

Touchdowns - -on, Bollinger,

14

0-3! 0— 0

(DePauw) Kay, ElFreed, McCullough.

(quad and has I •omhin "tion that a creditable show court. Due to reque-t ■he Banner is | castle schedule staiting Jof th, column.

,‘s ef pr iducing a ill at least make on the hirdwo, J • f numerous fans, -hing the flreenadvauee if the egul.2l ha-kethal!

(.1(1 I \( i-ll.I, I (11. (i si liooi it \ 'KICTII \ ( I '< in III l.l lauu-JM

■ l r,,w t >,,,, a Ii’ I I i .,til(l',,i l Tit, i I, in t iII, Hero Meitlnsville—Tl, Mini i, uli., Hen ,, Hi .,7.11 It. To

Points after touchih w ti Bradley, 3 (place ' kick.-); Bollinger (line plunge), Substitution- -i DePauw I Freed, B llinger, El-on, Kindly; (E v a n s v i 11 e) Hartke. (imham.

N< \v« i

Mi. |l»\ \ 11 loom 11

HVh. :: (iiit-n l-’ih. «i lii.ir.il | V»I». 'i .M i rt I !•. I ♦. i:5 < 'i ii \\ l LVI. I*. .Iiff, I W h. ‘j:: < *ni\\ i I’VI. jj riini>

Th. i ♦* lie- • ii !!• i rii**»'c I lei . • l«ro l Ttieiv < TIm i •

i

lie H< i • isvlll* M iK )—Thei i h ri 11 ere

Soviet tnvoy at White House

NOTICE

7.35

19.50

4.2(,

11.2<'

8.45 4.25 4.39 <>.90

Wheat Allotment,

Pay Your telephone account on or before the 15th of each month.

Indiana Associated Telephone Corporation flrernr*»<l« Ettchan**

Wearing a satisfied smile, Commissar Maxim Litvinov (right) is shown «s he left the White House after hm first meeting with 1 resident Roosevelt With the Soviet recognition envoy is James C. Dunn, of the United Slates Slate Department

CHAPTER XL Chatter along the line. Tcdh dug n defiantly—dying gamely. (Their halfbacks edged up to protrot the line. Ted flipped a cafe pa's over them to Sheets who gained th.:teen. The backs hung bark. “Let’s go " They went. . . . Pidgc off the weak side. . . . Pldpe faking the samt pi.iv, Stone rounding the strong side with a flood of infterfrrers who scattered opposition and moved Tom to the eighteen yraixl

line.

■‘Attahahy, Stone,” Pat called. “How do you like it, Tech? The line In Id; gave three yeo ds. Ted passed to Donley for first down on the seven-vard line. The hard, -t path to travel in the world—that last seven yards to the. goal. ... Ted cho«e the hardc-a. . .. Break their heart*. Brutal, savage, man-to-man tufT. Through the middle, i ,| e th. Igh the middle f 1 ,r two—behind J’at. "Where were you?” Pat called' derisively to his opponent. Slone through the Brute—one yard ... Not so hot. Not enough

drive.

Pidge, panting, wild-eyed. . . This wa- the one that counted. Pidge through the middle, ovc Pat—stopped in midair as the reinforcements came in—fought his way for two more by sheer fury. “Attababy, Pidge." Pat cried shiillv Here we come, Tech — who thinks he can stop us Pidge, ready to be shot out of a gun Go, Pidge, Pidge dove over the pile Touchdown. The stands rioted, pounced on Pidge laughing now ti.uk with led "Kick that goal and make it

safe ”

7-0

1 eelt attacking. . . .

. . Two. . . .

Ted grabbed the hi ought it hack. . . .

Intercepit passes. . . . Hold the line Kick to coffin corner. Kid 'em , . Make 'em like it.

, . Show 'em nothing.

Everybody crowding around Barney. shaking his hand, ('op- with bl.u k horses keeping thi

a wiuy.

3 he tension eased after fech flforgia wa-n't so hot this ycii and (hr Aggies had been scheduled as a .breather Then to finish up against Southern Cal. Northwestern and Army Barney's doctors promised that il he went back to bed loi two weeks (hey would let .him get 'H> iOT Southern Cal. whi< Ii nr,» looker! like the game rd the

year

The squad relaxed fa route to ' Geo,i a Piilge and Pit dewlopeW a flair lor dehnting anil argued about snv subject that was suggested Passing through the town of Neymoui. Indiann, Pidge suddenly nomirated Pat for mayor of the town. ■'f accept the nomination on nny ticket that's offered,” Pat replied, “tmd if elected, pledge Viv support to the ku Kins Ktan. Hibernia ft', VV C. T U.. Socialist. B’Nai B'Rgh leiotlcggr rs and anybody else who ha' a vote Comparative quiit—then a booming noise Brute Foreman had div

j

Somebody accused the Brute of being a traitor to the south and he Battened Ins man.

. The squad . . He was Stone walked

First down

next pass,

muddy, full of swirls and calmlife (lowed down to the green sea. Where it would carry him, led didn't know; but he was glad he was moving I de could become stagnated, too; flowing Ide, as flowing water, purified itself. College would soon be over In Cleveland. Mr Pidgin had told him that his plant new-paper expeii-I ment was well thought of and that fie would probably be a-krd to go to New York in lune and prepare to edit a magazine along the same lines tqr the entire coiporation II.s mind was le-s disturbed; he had more confidence and poise; more sympathy and understanding, he hoped He was teas serious 1 alrout little things lie had * deli- i ride sense ol value, now. seeing ctear4v many of the major issues he had only groped at three years before. He was orientated towards his life’s work, it seemed, and had achieved more of a normal altitude toward women Bath was no longer a pmk angel who lived on a rainbow; but a very tinman being with faults, still perverse at times but somewhat chastened and a little doubtful abont him He realized that Rt,salie had been right—no girl could have lived up to the impossible ideal he had imagined as Barb; he had made it difficult for both himself and Barb Rosalie had been right on «o many things; she w i- tight in her present coolness no doubt. But women could w ilt. 1 here was too much football at hand They were in the middle of a glorious achievement but only in the middle Disappointment might be waiting at* C.cot i Southern Cal would he a terrific test; Northwest ern had snapped to a mtd seajon

al-

loveir-d the train crossing the river

int, his native state and IJ«,-t intojform and Arm. uld be song about hi* Old Kentucky ] ways, a most ituhhorn barrier , T i• -i.iite,l - i In the morn g wra* rgnTed looked down at the muddy jning about discus- ng Looked-For „ te they I, (d come Iron In- Mountain flu lukd*. h*t own short - in Ohio; hkr the water ] tatiooga early in the morning and | I -IH’ way from b ime.lthe train # h.i<l tl tog mu ol however he looked at it l de town; and Pidee who had arisen 6-a-d elonu like that, unhurried. 1 early for that | t had missed

his mountain Tennessee Sunshine, tumbledown farmhouse* ami sparse plan tations Cotton fields in Georgia. Convict labor along the roads and ihe boys winning >-pike Parker to get under the beiths main Cotton buds breaking IV.umet sunshine and the squad shed coats The 'tatton as smoky as Piti*bint|h. Re potters Photographers, and a cigar eountet girl at the hoiel in

Athens:

"Y’all fm New D'min'nf IVhtil y'flll goan do beat us tomawr" Warm weather loosened rmtsiles. Stone insertirl Ins u.-ual touchdown run and Ted returned a punt -evenly vard? for a score Pidge made a fast freight dash for fifleeti yards and another score I vet-y-thing went well hut the game w a* a hit rough. Somebody accused the Brute of being a trauor to the south and he flattened his man -and that -tarted it The officials were blind but the sport* writers were not. Rob Walsh like it Bob like.) to «ee the game played that wav. Barney beluved in hitting hard hut pl.iyin* < leun—dir t v football alwavs handicapped the elevel, team. The trip ended as a perlecl holiday with the pottet, quickly named Kid Chocolate, taking a rongh*ride. Pat captured hi« while coal and cap ■ ind went alx ni ll,” r.ir • tendei mg slight service* gratis “W is noi«e money you'd be a millionaire" the porter 'aid to Pat alter recovering hi« garments But Kid Chocolate w t- enormon*!* proud That night, while (he pang slept, he stepped ofl the tram dur- • ■. nillv informed thr station porters thai he was carrying the New Dominion football team "Huh-—dem aln t nothin’," he was sioffinplv informed We got a team ain't been w hupped for three years “Whut team?’ ® JT( nnut -(*.-• d .tN w Hut team * "Huh—you get you.di tram an’ 1 gets mine at' - we play right heall r,n di; platform right now." I'lii Be CoQtU'.uc4J