The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 November 1933 — Page 4

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THE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE. INDIANA. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1933.

at 9 the kind of a stocking I like!

WONDfR BAND

f.. . . Beautifully sheer— and an unusual amount of wearability. i-... The Wonder Band that stops supporter runs if, their tracks. ..... Heels and foes that say, Wear us and go places." $1.00 ami $1.35 s. e. I'M vo co.

and Mrs. Albert Batch on MondayThe ixvasion was a birthday anniversary of Mrs- Smith. • The ladies Aid of the Christian church will sene their annual Thanks-a-ivinir sui»F«r in their Aid room on the evening "f 'J'iiesda>, November

28 th.

Mrs- Sol Adei; ;uid daughter Blanche and son N'irjril s|tent Sundav afternoon with Mrs Kllen Oakley at New Maysville. Mr. and Mrs. Kd Goshorn were called to Lebanon Tuesday evening by the sudden death of the latter s bristlier, Robert VanAllen. Ralph Sands, who ha- been ill at the Methodist hospital in Indianapolis is much improved and returned home

Friday-

Mrs Harve Shuey and Mrs Raymond Priest were iruests of Mr and

Mrs. Clyde Coffman Thursday

Dinner guests of Mr- Maggie Hall on Sunday were her mother, Nlrs. 1 lay Gall. Mrs Fffic Owens. Mr. and Mrs. Manfool Carrington, Mr- mid Mrs Alva Ooyel, and Mr and Mrs. Dephew Goff and son Billy, all of Russellville. Mr. and Mrs II \ r - Racquet and son ■ I .idell and daughter. Margie Frances j ..f Indianapolis; Mr and Mrs. Dale ' McCullough of Hillsboro, Mrand Mrs ' Alvin Clodfeltcr and children, Loraine Ansel, and Rutli Marylin of Crawfijrdsvi 11c, Mrs Anna Foster and Mrs-

Florence Hyten of Ladoga.

Mr. and .Mr>. Orville Vandeave and

spent the week end with Basil

Timers Defeat Old Rivals, 14-0; Have Perfect Record For Season

Ex-Kaiser Still Rated As Richest Man In Germany Has Given Up All Hope Of Regaining Lost Empire

WABASH YIELDS TO DETAI N GRID TEAM IN TILT

sAurday

Coach “Gaumy” Neal's DePauw football team invaded Cr.iwfordsvillc Saturday afternoon and defeated Wa- * hash, 14 to 0, t establish the best re- j cord ever made by a Tiger gridiron j squad in the history of tiie Methodist | institution. A result of this victory, ; the Old Gold aggregation has the j distinction of being one of two teams | over the entire country to have a per- ! feet record for the season. The DePauw players turned in seven - straight wins; were not tied, and their gial line was uncrossed by the ! oppo-ition By defeating Navy. L'l| to 0. Saturday, the Princeton Tiger- 1 remained the only other school in the nation besides the .DePauw Tiger that can boast a similar mark. In addition to this outstanding distinction in the athletic v< rid. Neal's oilt-

DEPAl’W |

Final) 3

9

Bull State

0

28

Eai Ih&m

(1

13

Manchester

•....()

12

Hanover

0

21!

Franklin

0

34

Evansville

0

14

Wabash

0

136

Total . .

0

the two-yard line and in two succeeding plays Pierce plunged over the goal line. Bradley added both points after

touchdowns fmr placements. Wabash's principal threat came in

the first quarter when, led by "Red" Vainer, the Little Giants started a march down the field that netted three straight dmvns and carried the ball to the D'd’.mw 21-yard marker. The Tigers then bra ed, threw Wabash back twenty yards and tho

Scarlet kicked

Nine Waba.-h niors climbed into moleskins for the la.-t time. They

fit is one of onlv twelve or fourteen I Vinroot. Milam, Wheaton, Mansejuads in the I nited State.- that fin-I ^ hn0< ! d . y ;. 1 : , _“:, an ''

jshed the schedule m the undefeated

DOORN, Nov It (iflP)—Wilhelm H is ^ti!l the riche.si German and by

fa, the wealthiest of Europe’, kings '^t»rs more prewlng than thi Hoh-

ment. Wilhelm has lost interest. He, like Hitler, knows that Germany has

an i family at Crown Point,

4* -I* *!• *1* BAINBRIIMJE By Mrs. Nelson

Mrs- Mar) Rlm k has gone to Indianapolis to spend the winter with her son Haney and family Mrs. Walter Ratcliff and -on have returned fr an all extended \ isit with

relatives in Ohio

Mrs. Daisy Kuwurds i vi.-iting her

son Frank li and family in Indiana- | dianapolis \ i>it

(Kilis

Mrs D G Leyejibeiger and Mrs. <'arl Smith were dinner . ii -t-of Mr BANNER VDS GKI RESl I.FS

son

Pruitt

Tnd

Visitors at Indianapolis on Friday were Mr and Mrs. Ray Etcheson, l-'ledn Bratton. Charles Shea, Hans Anderson, Mrs Claude Ftchi'.-on, Mrs. Carrie Brann, Edna Pi-a rl Dickson

an^/ Mr- Ruth Steele.

Mr. and Mr- Fred Frank and ■ lUghter vi-it. il relative- in Green-

castle over the week end

Several from here attended the H one Fconondi s Club at Greencastle

Th ursday a ftemiMin.

Dr and AD'- L. VS'. Ve.u’h spent

Sunday in Indianapolis.

Mr and .Mrs Carl Dnrnall and M* and Mr- (I 11 l.oyenliereer were In*

' Sunda)

Re-United After Thirty Years

Lieutenant-Governor Albert B. Chandler, of Kentucky, is shown with his mother. Mrs. A. W. Chamberlain, whom he found alive in Jacksonville, Fla., where he went in an attempt to locate her grave. Lieut.-Gov. lhaudlar had not seen his mother for thirty years and had believed her dead.

Probable Lindy "Home Stretch”

oluinn.

Naturally the member* of tin Tiger varsity deserve much praise for the fine showing but the real credit goes to head coach Neal and ‘Tubby" Moffett. Depauw’s athletic director, who as i -ted Neal ail fall. In the four years that Neal has directed the Old Cold, Wabash has not deleated DeiTauw, although the Cavemen managed to h 11 the h eal collegians to a scoreless tie last year, Wabash-DePauw n nils for the past four years are; 1 TIG—DePauw 7, Wabash («; 1 h"I—DePauw Id, Wabash 7; 1932—DePauw 0. Wabash. 0; 1933 I>e-

Pauw 14. Wnba.-h 0.

The DePauw season gave the Tigers the undisputed claim to the state secondary college championship. A new United States record was set

Varner, Robbins and Meese, backs. A large portion of the DePauw student body, i- well as the DePauw band, attended the game, with the hand reeling off formations on the gridiron between halves. The students and the band -tag d a parade through the business district shortly before

game time

Lineup and .-u nmury:

In exile. His fortune is estimated at $231,000,000. His businos- agents vigorously dispute t*)is figure, but the official tax assessment books in Berlin show that the ex-Kaiser’s goods and wealth are greater than an.\ other taxpayer’s. Before hi.- ‘abdication, Wilhelm’s j castles and land alone were worth a staggering figure. Under the settlement between the state and crown in 192)1. he sin rendered six palaces in Berlin, four in Potsdam and til in oUiec parts of Germany, as well as numerous smaller properties.But here is a pait of what he. has

left:

The Hohenzollem ancestral castle in the Sehwabian Alps.

enzollerns.

So, resigned to the probability that he uever will rule Germany again, he remains in the peace of this Dutch village, delving ceaselessly into the. archives for material to convince the world that the war guilt cannot be laid at Germany’s doer. The war guilt! The war .guilt is on brain night and day. Almost every afternoon he retires to Bis study to read and re-read more documents that can show the great war was forced i>n Germany. A staff of historians aid him, sending him daily 'eports fiom Germany on their find-

ing*.

Wilhelm II is content to live in the past—or what remains of it. He has no hope to recapture the rest.

Rhein.-tein Castle, n the Rhine. HEALTH RECORD AMONG Five palaces in Berlin, one in Pots- JOBLESS FOUND LOWEST dam and one in Rheingau. WASHINGTON, (UP)—Proof that I he print ipalit) of Oel-, in Silesia, families -if unemployed are in po rer

Evansville, when he ran !'!* yards' with a hi eked kick to score the only ten hdown of the game against Ball St ite o t. 4. The former record of 93 years wa 'icld by Phillip Marshall of < amegie and was scored against

Pittsburg in 1919.

< oaeh Neal will lose ten members of his team by graduation, eight of tlu m regulars: George Loll/., East Chi'ago. center; Daniel Simpson. Tip-j tm.. and Don Hartline, Danville, III.. | *' 1 guards; l-'rank Rothman, Dayton, O., 1 R liert McCullough, Indianapolis, and Jed Pearson, Evansville, tackles; Alvin Volknian, Evansville, end: Rob- ! ert Bmiley, Fort Wayne, and Bruna Avc, Clinton, halfbacks, anj Harry j

Haggerty, Muncle, center

The • rawfordsville Journal-Review says '.oncerning Saturday's encoun-

ter:

The Tiger- completed their season at Ingalls field Saturday b) scoring :i II to 0 victory over Wabash rind a- a re.-ult Def’auw t-«lay is one of lie' very, very few teams in the Unit-’d States whs li won all the game- on it* reason -ehelule without having it* goal line ci i.-.-ed. \ ietory over Wabash meant Uu seventh triumph of the -ea-oii for the eleven "Gaumy" N- rl ee. -hed and the fourteen point-* roller up against the Little Giants brought the Tigers’ total for the campaign up t ■ 130—-opponents none It was Waba-h’s hoinrvoniing game and a crowd .if more than 2,000 including Mayor Reginald Sullivan >< f Indiana; olis and many alumni .student.- of both Wabash and DePauw,

ation led

The checkup of receipts fv>r the game wa not expected to 1m* completed until M m ay, but it wa- thought that the net receipts would approximate $1,800 The local Community Che.-t. by its arrangement with college ifficials, will receive about *180 DePauw triumphed over Wabash Saturday by virtue of a lasU-hulf rally scoring a touchdown apiece in tho i third ami fourth |>eiio»ls. The first half went to the Little. Giant-, Wabash piling up nine fir-t downs one ul them pre-ented to the Scarlet by a penalty—to two for DePauw. For the entire game, Wabash had fourteen first downs to eight for DePauw. The Scarlet guim-i a total of is| yard* from scrimmage t > 113 for DePauw. Wabash lost 53 yards tind was penaliz'd 45 yards, while DePauw lost 11 yards and was penalized 15. The big difference cam • in ; a-sing, where DePauw gaineil |01 yards to ’57 for

Wabash

Two quick thrust- in the last half give DtPauw its niarguin of^victory. In the third quarter Bradley >tart»d the t»»H rolling with a 30-yard run A IP yard pa-s, Bradlt^v to \ dknian, put the ball on the Wabash eight-yard line The Scarlet (defense stiffened and held IhJ’auw for three tlowns, hut on the fourth, Bradley heaved • another pa-s—to INerc*, fullback, for a touch-

down.

In the fourth peitiod, ItePauw took the ball on tho Wabash forty yard Him after an exchange of kicks, Avn ran to the Wabash 18-yard line. la the fourth period, DePauw coinplrUxl another pass (t> carry the 1' nfller to the Vi aba ti -e.-n , ,{ « ?tri|>e An end run ca.Tio'l tl^ ball to

, DePauw

Po*.

W aba-h

Volkman

I.K

Bern*

| McCullough

LT

Alilain

I Hurtline

LG

Stierwalt

I.ortz

c

Wheaton

j Simpson

RG

Koinert

j Rothman

RT

Joyce

j Kay

RE

(c) Vinroot

■ Bishop

Q

Snyder

! Ave

LH

Gewecke

Bradley

RH

Varner

Pierce

F

Gerow

Score by period-:

DePauw

U 0 7 7—14

Wabash ....

000 0- 0

Substitution

DePauw: Kinally,

Horst, Schroder, Hickman, Elson.

Wise; Wabash:

Riggs, Mee-e, Cla-

huugli, Luzar.

T vuehdown-

Pierce

(2).

Points aft“r

touchdown - Bradley

(2).

Officials—R feree,

Yamell (Ind-

with several adjoining estates. Four villas in Potsdam, one in Hamburg, one in Wuerttemberg and

one in Gerolstein.

Tw ranches in South Africa. An island near Ploen, Holstein. Four churches in scattered pa i ts

of Germany.

An estate on the island of Corfu.

Hunting i idges, office buildings, .

health than families of the employed is claimed to have been found in surveys conducted by the U. S. public health service in conjunction with the Milbank Memorial fund, acconding ti reports by the government bureau, j The survey, conducted in a number | of typical eastern urban cities showed that the disabling sickness rate

* onslaiu> BENNETt ( >ik werton^ CHANad] " tM ’' V * "MsiJ uw AYl

fiu D °NT MLoh u with GINGER R0G| OIMI DA AND (Il)|)| n |

the conn In li- j,,^^

dale from whi. i,

I was nearly 50 per cent higher in fain- wa resumed in

vaiivu, ,.untry estates, memorials,; i liKS of thl . unemployed than it watovver-, and valuable real estate prop- j j n fainilie- of those working. At the

erties in Berjm and other large cities.

Under the 192)> arringement, Wilhelm and Hermine were given permission to live in the palace and park al Hamburg whenever tl.ey wished. Hut Wilhelm never lias gone back since his exile. He is free, of course, to go anytime, but the Dutch government will not guarantee, him asylum again if he does. There still is a strung “Kaiser” party in Germany. It runs ns a subcurrent in polities, but it is an important one. It works subtly but steadily for the hoped-for restoration, aided zealously by Hermine. Herminefs one goal, her one thought, is to be Empress of Gcr-

same time, frequency of illness was found to be in direct proportion to the inadequacy of the family income. “The highest illness rate,” the re-

cir.uit court

tsloi;. Judge W. S.

been continued from Nov. | recess was taken because ^ Pawley cf liiazil, exerulor,

leave for a ca.-e in federal The executor i:- conteudintl

port says, “is reported by a group j heirs are not . imtled to,, (of families) which was in reason- ihe ran id ii , | h. ,, ablly comflortable cinoumstanees in I wt re not to I,, |, , |: j 1929, lint which had dropped to com- tm iidii- i n „t,. , parative poverty by 1932; their ill-lo ■ ash. an m in n;

lies- rate is 55 .per cent higher than that of their working neighbors who were equal in economic status in 1929 but wh suffered no drop in income

by 1932.

TRIAL IS RESUMED Trial of the ease of W. S. Gregor and ether heirs of the

ianu U ); um. ire, Diderieh (Butler')!

Julius (Indiana U);

head linesman. Russell (Indiana

State).

INDEPENDENTS WIN

Tin Greei . astle Independents, se.ni ' pro basketball team i-omposed of forme'- Tiger Cub and DePauw players, defeated Monrovia, Is to 10. Saturday night, it Monrovia. A number of former Martinsville hisrh school stars

played with the k.sels.

Wednesday night the locals go to Kokomo f. a game. Included in tie Kokomo Inn up is Dick Howell, exWabash -tar; Tom Downey, .Franklin, and Mai in Dicks, former Ball Stati-

st nr.

VI ROCKVILLE Final c; R.wcliiinlc, 18; Rockville, 1 ”• Score at i ilf: Roucbdale, 13; Rockville. 5 Koachdah B F Clone, f. 2 h Rolrert.- on, f 0 t Sutherlin, f 1 0 Jeffrie-, ■ () 4 Perkins, ii k ... 3 1 Voung, g it 0 Taylor, g () () Rockville H....F J. Forest, f 1 1 Alkire, f 1 o Ball, c 1 0 Ca.-e, g • o 0 Parker, g 1 1 "I! ' ' I Rockv ille. 17; Roachdale, 15. HAINBKIIM.E PREP ( \GER R Ft I RNS ilMNi HOSPII A I. BAINBRIDGE, Nov. 18- Ralph Sands, son of Air and .Mrs. H R. Sand.-, ha- eturnc ■ from the M. K hospital at Indianaiolis. where he ha- bis-n eritiettlly ill. He -how . con-.-iderublo improvement. He is « ,-enior in the I sal high school and a member of the basketball team

many. She Inis schemed and talked | Belle McGregor <f Brazil, in winch and worked for it. Her h .)*•- were | t h.i heirs are petitioning the court high the first few years after her j for a i-ishi in . bare in inierest on marriage. Now she nears disillusion-i Income from Die estul ". an ' asking

I

of I heir 1.-* qn« sir ua, i Brazil V. Mi' j,. \v,y|

Some $17,000 nr UNiHui

in the suit Local attonrnf

case are .lames & Allee. i ing the iieirs. and M. J. Msij sis ting nttorney* for tht ti No question of an cna Ihe exeentor of ir.u the estate is mvolwd. m previous issu Tin ibtna

said Monday.

READY FOR LIVESTOCK SHOW

rnl

M 11. i.n «

AI '’ */£■*•- 40 W9.

With more than 13,000 bluehloods of the farm animal kingdom entered, a lai i ! '" ! l! 1 year, the thirty-fourth annual International Live Stock Exposition at the Union St' ■ Yards in C,^ I>eccmlK'i' 2 to 9, promises to lie the! greatest, since the event was fir t held in 190)1 I 1 tr '' * _ bluebloods, Wynkcn, Blinken and No i (above) will carry iff many blue ribb us in ih J * ' ‘ horn cuttle at the exposition, it is the fond hope of T- Dorsey Junes, i stock liri' lei sliriiiv'ili.

Army Men Mentioned to Head New York Pofe f

GIRL SCOI T NEWS

Ihe Girl Scout troop No. 2 held the 7th nuciing in the auditorium of the Thiril Ward School building, Wed-

nesday, Nov 15, 1933

After the usual formation Scout pint, were awarded to those who ha-i pa-.-ed their TenderfiMit test. After that thi patrol meetings were held. Then most of the girl scouts passed texts. Game- were played a ft eg - the meeting, Court of Honor wa- held

shock IT-XT AT LOS ANGELES LOS ANGELES, Nov. 20, (UP) * An earthquake of extremely mild force wa* felt in Los Angele. county at 2 35 a. m. today. The s*lock wa» nuted in residentm! section* of Los Angeles and alili in 1/mg Beach, was 'h^rvJly of sufflci^nt force t 0 arou*e *’eeping renj.

dents.

8RI6 GEN. ___ _ IJ CsLASAFORoHBvi 'RHaamnre* GEN. FECHET

l . -y- --»- "-si i.,,,. inaiiriiT in which a eoWlier deal* vviDi 'I pjiv ! i■ J, as has been rumored, Mayor* ett I loreilo LaGuardD appoints one of these three men 1 r " ir( | in tR’J missionecui New York. Brigbdier (;eiii.i a | p^iug,,, |y Glassford can boast a distingui h'«l , v -itJ XZZir i ,ICt V hicf °S r fhmKton D. C. ‘”ere hi. Sirl.v handling of the t-i; ; -J • routed tl admtntioa al the cm i , nation Maior Genoral Fechct also has an He -en , d m th-World War with th, U.Ta?r force* He "Lmme chief of .he | ' -J1 rom (hi .mny bi-.t year. Major General John F O'Rvan. one of the m<>*t decorate- »f I* I commanded the 2rth Division 4k. LL F. Krlncc and Krtgium. He la that rare t'"' 1 ’ 11 |

• • ° buauiiiss uuu wud svi.Ui.ex,

MAJ GUO. O aw**

I. h ‘L. nHt i mn wil1 w *K h .^ ith ,lu «p mil lest the manner