The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 November 1933 — Page 1
g + * + + • + THE weather * CLOUDY; PROBABLY RAIN + *******
THE DAILY BANNER “IT WAVES FOR ALL”
ALL I HE HOME NEWS UNH ED PRESS SERVICE ♦ * + ***
[volume forty-two
GRELNCASTLF. INDIANA. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 28, 1933.
NO. 37
XAIR BROWN GIVEN CHANCE for RECOVERY
Soviet Ambassador
m
tREENCASTLE BOY PARTLY C ON V IOL’S IN HOSPITAL AT COLUMBUS
LYNCHING IS CONDONED ID
! CONFESSES RoBltum
OP PKRRY.MLLE B\NK ' 1
CLINTON, Ini. Nu\ 28 JCubUry of tJio PerryvttLj State bank on Nov.
i '(IV RI~^T PH ! 15 solve<| ti»da> with the eonfosj II S|l>|1 of Walter Grin e.*, 30 years old, 'of 11 .ward, Park eounty. Grimes was
MRS. THOMAS PASSED AWAY MONDAY EVE
WILL bi
• vi- anvst«Hl at CJvintrtoii Saturday and.......
VN'I . MEMBER wa „ u;1 ^ iaU . |v ,. lkrll to th „ Vermtl-! ,>K V1 H Ul WK, L KN °" N
lion fountv jail a. Vw,.ort for ..ue.J VV ' 'M.I.OMS SHORI SKKlion in if. IOUS ILLNESS
PARDON
CALIFORNIA MOB WHO
IS ARRESTED
Kidnap Target
mm
IAS F II A C r U K E D SELL L
iHARl KITES ON MONDAY
Injuriri* Confined to Face and Head. Memliers of Family Report Tuesday
Chiirw Brown, 23 year old son of Mr. i Mrs. Milton .Brown, 523 Andcr- j street, seriously injured, in an ' L.ymobile accident near Columbus ; Lmday nipl't. was sriven an even Ugnoe for recovery Tuesday, mem- I Lis of his family here were in- ! [ormed by hospital attendants. Brown suffered a fracture of the 1 hull, a fractureid cheek bone and [ractured nose, a bud cut across one j lyebrow, and other cuts about the and head. It was said his in- j urics were confined entirely to his
|a-e and head.
The youiiK accident victim partly j Lgained consciousness Monday nisrht ■ fctd bruutfht the first hope that he j lay recover from his injuries. His 1
Irndittoti is still
|vcr.
It wa. Iielieved the accident ofurred when a front tiro on his Ford dan blew out. as he was enroute ome from Louisville. ’I'he car went
ut of control and rebounded side to the other, of ;
iridye, beintf reduced to a inau.. of
IrreckaRe.
Alexander Antonovich Troyanov*kj, former Ambassador to japan, who has been appointed first Soviet Ambassador to the United States. A Bolshevik from his early youth. M. Troyanov-ky served the u.:ual martyrdom ip Siberia and as an exile in Europe before the revolution lifted him to power-
Bodics Of Kidnapers Lynched San Jose Mob Remain In City Morgue
He at fir.-t denied the robbery, hut IhIcv admitted lidding; up the batik, saying' he was forced t ; > do it to iret 1 money to pay hospital e\ipetises for a I daughter.
l.M l-I.ONG COINIY KFiSlDEN I
CONFESSION
UEPIDI VI ED BY DR. WYNEkOOP
Uushand \nd Five ( In .Iren .'iiriiieLived On West Walnut Street Road.
Farm IJurrau Plans To l>(‘
Drive Made
very critical, '’^n'V'h'r i hoI SK SATURDAY G
AFTERNOON'
SAN JOSE! Cal., Nov. 28, tUP) Its lust for revenge satiated, the mob that Sunday night lynched the killers of Brooke Hart, 22, today resumed the quiet life that characterized thi.community before young Hail was
kidnaped and slain. . —— Hodir- of the kidnapers, Thomas I Ml RDKIt CASE. I’ONDEKED
Thurmond and John Holmes, were in ( OOK COl VIA GRAND
the citi morgue. The battered old ,11'KY AT ( MM AGO county jail and two scarred elms in
St. .lame, park where the men WCrt ^ \ 1( \ , (U P) The hanged remained to testify to the ;, vsida|l wa ltHiav to th( . mob spint that seized the city. of Ur . Altl , Wynkoop after
Jnsc’s
Hart, son of Alex J. Hart, owner , ^ matron im u, aed the prison
largest department I oi , . sk , a) con(|]t| „ n wa . , )et . omin(r
•store, was liuiied late yesterday It
|AMM KIDNAPINt. .11 RY REPORTED DKADLtX'KED
Plans fs>r the annual I'utnam county Farm Bureau membership drive from i are now underway, w ith Ralph Hossteel tetter, president of the organization. Its drive chairman. He will be assisted by leaders in every h eal community and by social and educational di-
rectors.
Directors of the farm bureau will j Hm-,.
ST. PAUL. Minn.. Nov. 28, (UP* |our Touhv gangster-, were acquitted a jury in federal court here today i chances of violating the Lindbergh dnaping law The jury deliberated
ore Ilian 15 hours.
hold their regular monthly meeting in the county agent', office Saturday afternoon at 1:30 o’eloek.
was the finding of his mutilated body in San Francisco bay, 17 day, after he disappeared, that caused San Jo,e to revert to the old vigilante days and take justice into its own hands. Ringleaders of the lynchers will go unpunished. This became certain when Governor James Rolph, Jr., brooking nationwide condemnation, publicly announced he condoned the hangings and would pardon any man
arrested.
Rolpli cancelled an engagement at Idaho, because “conditions in
wor,* 1 . Dr. Wyn< i-mp, charged with murder in conncc mu with the mystery mutder of l„ i daughter-in-law, is suffering from a bronchial cough
and high blood pi uio.
Mrs. Eve Thomas, age til years, ■ wife of Aaron Thomas, well known ( resident, passed away Monday evening at 7:15 o’clock at her home on west Walnut street, following a short
illness of serious nature.
She i : . survived by the husband and BY ! bee children, Mrs. 0 T. Ellis, city; j Mrs. Margaret Clark. Brazil; Charles 1 1.. Thomas, Frank Thomas, and Is'vi Thomas, all of near Lena. Two sister. Mrs. Minerva Blown, who made her home with Mrs. Thomas, and Mi Rebecca Aker of near Ieiiu, and twenty grandchildren and six great-
grandchildren, also survive.
Mrs. Thomas was a life-long iesilent of I’utnam County. She was a member of the Baptist church it Ut-
ter Creek.
V*/
'
LOCAL IK)A HONORED
( Hit AGO, Nov 28. (UP)- Upon I two repudiated tonfe.-sioils and a
Pretty little Marie Alyce Konlay. granddaughter of the late Muyoi Anton Cermak of Chicago, who was revealed a- the proposed victim of a Miami. Fla., kidnap and extortion plot. Chicago authorities refused request of Florida police to extradite Gail Swolley, who is held in Chicago in connection with the ca-^e. Sarah (1. Miller K\|iires Monday
former ki 'IDKNi m ito vt nDALI \ It INI IA LEW KS 88
>t RVIVOKS
MINS DAM At. E SUIT
A judgement of #50 was tetumed in favor of the 'plaintiff in circuit
court Monday by Judge Wilbur
ST. PAUL. Nov ''8 (UP* The 1 Conner in the damage suit of William ■y in the William"llamm. Jr., kid- 1 t>. Colliver of Biinbridge against prnf ease mts deadloiked today. I Christoplu-r E. Eqtuwr. the suit whs More than 15 hours after receiving I the result of an automobile collision
case against four Chicago beer ! near the residence of Dexter and ngsters, Hie two women and ten j Eiul Haiigun April 2!*, 19.50.
Ml made no move toward reporting * ollixei brought suit July 19, askverdict at 10 a. in., when Judge M. | in K $60 from Knauer fo. damage to . Joyce reconvened court. I his automobile in a collision. Evidence The jurors, after spending 'the was heard Tuesday by Judge Dmmer. light ut the St. Paul hotel, across the j witnesses including Earl Evans, A. J.
from the city halUourhouse. Clark, Marcus Brown, Dexter and
(turned to the jury room adjoining ' Earl Harigati, and Harlan H. Hurst.
IVeslry A. Tolliver, HI years oi l, a
my state mow arr very unsettled,
making it unwise for me to leave.’’ . J)( . Alii . t> gh(H aild chloroformed her
Doubt was expressed by city and \ litan haired
county officials that any of the lynchers w ould be arrested. They in-
Herschel tiross, of Greencustle, has
maze of circuni i.intial eviilcncc, j (x'cii chosen .is mnnager of the .staff state prosecutors today -ought the | of the Campus Crier, the school pHi( or indictment of Di Mice Wynekoop. iof Central Normal College This 1 cldci ly physician, and son, Earle, on < choice was mack' because of his abil-
j charges of killing Rheta Gardner jty and personality. Airs. Sarah C. Miller, age sk died at 1 Wynekoop, the si n unwanted wife. Mr. Gross, was recently elected 9;30 o’clock Men ay niorring at the [ slat' Today’s meetin • the grand jury ! president of the Junior class of On- 1 home of her m ighter, Mrs ( harl “S was last active ion of the pres- I trul Normal College- This honor has j Payton, of near Vivun e She lot I lent panel. Dougherty charged that I hren bestowed upon him because of i Ikmii ill for the (> i-t everal months
his ability and popularity among the j and death was due t., complications-
students <»f his class
he courtroom and resumed their de-
liberations.
Judge Joyce began convening u kpecial term of federal court, and the l"iir defendants remained locked in Ihejr cells under heavy guard.
former judge of the thirteenth judicial circuit, was attorney for the plaintiff, while Albert E. William-
was attorney for Knauer.
HANhltl PH A HEARING IS
' SET FOR DECEMBER EIGHT
Ntesnauwewe N tuncllla . N .,». INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 28— Ar- 1 Hied a petitnm m voluntary hankrugnmentof Miss Cora Steele, Terre ruj>U T , will given a hearing m Baute school teacher, on a charge of fhe law Bhrary of t u utn nn * " in y extracting bonds valued at #25,000 ' cimrt house, at ten " el-n k m the from a safety box.maintained by the , morning of Dec unber 8 before Everett |
btate CewiMni’ retirement fund, was A Daviaaon,
sisted none of the leaders had been identified and that action, if any, must await recovery of Sheriff William Emig. Emig was seriously injured when the shrieking mob battered its way into the jail, seized Thurmond and Holmes,a nd dragged them to the park. The sheriff was non-committal. The district attorney .--aid he could not take action unless Emig ordered. He expressed the belief the sheriff's views would coincide with Governor
Rol pit's.
Meantime would-be heroes proclaimed themselves leaders of the mob. Most of them were boy* in their late 'teens. They proudly told how they in Red the mob, how they provided rope for th,' executions, and 1 how they braved tear gas bombs and clubs to break into the jail Despite | newspaper photographs proving otherwise, authorities denied the youths were among the lynchers and ascribed their stories to a desire to
boast.
youiiL'- daughter-in-law
and that Earle planned the crime, purchased cartridges, taught his mother to shoot h icvolver and in-
cited her to the bei d.
Both suspects wa re held in the county jail on warrants dunging murder. B iota's body was found on an operating i-odp m the basement of the Wynekoop family’s outmooded mansion on th vest -ide a week ago. As though fo medical examination, it had been • ripped of clothing. A bullet wound r the back ami presence of chlnroiei'm in the body ex-
plained the d< i.
Subsequently Dr. Ah o signed
statement ad ' ting
TO DISTRIBUTE a A PAYROLL ON SATURDAY
(LOSE IO 85.000 WILL BE PUD Oirr IN' ( HEUKS BY LOCAL OFFICERS j FURTHER VPPROVAES SOUGHT Foit'inun of Various Projects in Vlect Workmen Saturday to ll.mil Out ClM'cks I * F irst distribution of c ic k- to | wrrkmen employed in Putnam county , under the federal civil works relief ! nlar, will he ma<le Saturday by foremen cp the various proje t.-, C. C. Gautier. >-ivil works admini-trator and disbursing officer, stated Tue:,-
I da\.
It is estimated that dose to #5,00(1 i in cheeks will he distributed h; the j foiemail to men working in every | township in I’utnam county. It will i he the first time in months that 1 many of the men hav*- earned pay. Foremen on the various projects | will put their payrolls in the hand of | the certifying officer, < . t'. Hue tis, 1 not later than Thur day noon, and he j will check the lists an 1 turn them over to the disbursing officer for | further checking and making out of j checks. The cheeks will he given to i hire foreman for distribution at 'designated points Saluiday morning. Each workman is earning >h rents an hour and works u I >tal of ;;U li'.ur..
each week.
C. 0. Huestis was in Indianapolis Tuesday seeking approval by the. ci'il works board of additional project-, in this county. As 'non as these arv approved additional men will be put to work. More than 200
began work Monday.
I s<* (ias Tax
For Highways
( (M \ I Y BOND ri!itrkmi.n r SECONDARY, McNI T I POINIS OlT
“Counties which have used their share of the state gasoline tax to retire bond , can not expect to have lire federal government finance their
that -he admin- I , ounty road maintenance program as
islered chloroform to the girl. When ' a |,ul)lic works jiroject."
Rheta died from the chloroform th<' physician shot the dead body, the statement said Dr. Alice t’i* t ascribed her daughter-in-law'.- death to
a prowler’s bullet.
Mrs Miller was horn in Putnam county on April It*. 1815, the daugh- ] ter of Archie and Itels’eou Scott. She j was united in marriage to William ' Martin Miller of I’utnam county on j Nov. 15, IHIil Her husbaml die^i 1 lust
Augu t
The iU-i’r i- ■ i had spent practically 1 in r entire life in .ir near Koachdalc
TROOPS t.l \RD FOI R MEN CH ARGED M I I H M N( HINtr SAUSBUKY, Md. Nov 28 (IT) —Stale militiamen threw more than 100 tear gu> bombs tlo'iaiy at a crowd of some 2.1H)U H'i - ai- w ho threatened
This ruling was empha.-tzod by . , , ,
,, , , i, v . i i Advance; 28 grandelublren, .i0 greatGovernor Paul V. McNutt ^great-gn-at
direct»h] attention to thi* turnmi*: i
. ^ i irrandchilureii
•down of >U( h propo als b> tno roa n i , i,.
, huuoral .-orv iros will t>o con iudea
ermirs unemployment relie comm. - ^ vy ,, Jl; „, dliy Hf t, mo0n tee. which must approve all project-;^ ^ |{im< . hduU , hri , tia „ churclr
going to live w-?th her daughter near to mob tIn 7 iiroWf tiete In iwFlteli Advance follow ing the death of her ' were four jren am PhI on charg* i
husband- : x>f lynching a negro-
Surviving an- one -on, Dannie Mil- ’ The barrage turned the villag'* lor, of Fra* kfort; seven daughter 1 , I street into a replica of a W orld war Mr- Annie Eggers, of Judson; Mrs. [ villnge, with citizens fleeing the I liza Thompson and Mrs. Clara [ heavy yellow fumes and soldiers L',to-<u , of Roaehdale; Mrs Coirt ; then'selves 'iiffi-ring from its effect . Rocklehimer, Mr. Florence Davids. • Finally the entire stret wa eleared
and Mr Alice Zimmerman of lad j of pedestrians, iarwi'oli~, mid Mrs Della Bay ton, of j ——
PRINT ESS ANNE, Md .
lUPV-ln the darkne.-- helore lawn tiHlay -tate trooper- bur I inte dozen, of homes in this sleeping hamlet.
CIRU I T ( OHM' Mil ES
which taki s imr.-uns from poor
relief !
t and i roll.
In
puts them on the federal pay
1 with the Rev. C Market, in charge ui the Roaehdale
TRAIN \ I ( TI M I T NERAL
referee, tor this dis* i |''ujieral ervices were held sit Bra
and
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28. I UP I Albert H. W’iqgiii, deposed head of j
trict-
srt ye terday for Monday, Dec- L Miss Steele, a foltirter trustee of Die |
fund, was inificted last week- She was I l^ulf »»» Sl'lllllll arnsbed at Terre Haute, brought lu re l I UII1II > ‘ M ' 1 and was released on - #10,000 bond' rjx |> I -V) ■ • ,0,ln 1
pending wnugnment. | <) h<‘ Jclll. Z,»>| people were instur.tly Tlie fact Unit tw o #10,000 bond, and | Uieir auto wa.s struck by a fast Pena l5.00fflw.Hl hail been taken from I jnsylvania raUroad traan at the Aia•lie box ww» discoveml several weeks’ County Agent E. W. Baker ha.- an-1 bairn a street crossing
■go Tlie 15,000 bond luw been trace<l j nouneed that a poultry rhool has]
Suit of the Graham Payier Company, . , . , , „ ,, , In citing the refusal to do . ounty
;jc, n :Cic j^itfanTiS v-;" £ t; 1 rtl (L ' uMsTEt<T,M, * Nv
’.. , . , , i funds haw not been used for t at |
uniiaul note and aci'ount, has been ■
. .. puruo.-e, t.overnor M Nutt laid d wn filed, coming ere on a change of , ' ’ . . . , „ r... i . „ ,, . , tw.i rub s lur state ga - tax fund u-e-venue from Owen county. Demands .. . . . .„ , . , Jurst. highway mamtenanci
, of *io0 on the note and #I2.j() on the i . , . | zll Tuesday afternoon for Mis.- Anna j uc) . ()unt :u . ( , m i(lo | retirement of debts.
Mary Penman, third victim of a cross-, ‘ Mat)e i Mason tiled suit Tuesday i lug crash in Brazil which also caused ; a|rajn! . t j HCO |, y, Hirt to collect an Uh> deaths of Chester Kidwoll ami ! , ll( . u ,. (1 11M1(aif | noU .. \ demand of
Sutherlin
I AirJiart. of New Burial w ill be made
cinetery
W \S I \LSK
National hank, today de-
seeking the nine ringleader- ol a mob which lynched a ynung negro last month. Four of the alleged ringleaders were arrested. The other fixe vanished, with the .-teel-liehneted uldiei - earching all building-, patrolling road-, and preparing to penetrate nearby wood.-. Gov. Albert * Ritchie i.rdcred the
.soldier- Imre in hi vigorous earn-
,•».« | John David Fisher The three young . ..t noonlc were instiu.tlv killed w hen
alleged unpaid note. A #131) i- made. Suthorlin A are attorneys for the plaintiff.
R<‘|>orl Is Madr On -i-Arn 1 Hols
the Clmse
nounyed ' tock market j a |,., hend the lynchers of committee as “wholly nnd absolutely | (p, 0 |, y( Amiwool, negro who wa false, the .worn testimony t " a ft er |„ i onfe. -ei| atta king liam Fox that in 1929 the bunke* a e„i| white woman, Ritchie' or
sent to President Hih . er a to “mini his own business."
•Ige
( it.VIRAt IS ON THE w \Y
school
to Cedar Raipid-, .Iowa, where Mis-' been secured for Putnam county bn j Steele’s nwather and brother live. One | j. in | he vommittee, Glendyn Ir ] "f the Ixmi.V of the large demmiina-j w in, chairman, Madi -on town-hip; j
Ron has Ireeni traced b> Bo.stem and
the other io Now York
• rovenior Paul V- McNutt, in coin-
Madison
j Mrs. /s lla ( learwater.-. rioverdale i township; John Sears, Marion town-j | ship, and cyiil Johm ton. Russell
Fiivrn
PETERS III OPEN t AMP MEN INDIANAPOLIS. Nov 28. (UP) R. Karl Peters, Fort Wayne, former Democratic state chairman who recently announced hi- candidacy for
tnenting yestenlify on the disappear- j township, met w ith Leon I >dd, 1 ur- ^ Rnited States senate, will open ■nee of Hie honds said a recetit check | due p„ultryman, recently and made v|inlpa j RM headquarteis in the had shown lihat nwny of the bonds i ( ,| ans for the hool. Tne school "' ,l I jj n j„ n -i jjic building here Dec. 1. hrid in Hie fund have tsM-ome worth-1 ( K , |,eld in the court house at Green- j
less during the drt|vreasion- castle.
|„ view of the part which poultry
i't I HM.1I «« in now playing in meeting family ex. Y II I Ul Mvi'l p, uses in I’utnam county, this choo
should be of particular interest to all
1NDI \NAPOLIS LIYKSDK K
Wtdnestlay Noon;«,!»*,’I':.:;:,
hiwanis Club will meet Wednesday toot Hv- week rather than Tlrunalay,
A large at-
tendance is exjiected at this school,
1 which will he free.
Poultry men and women of
ounty have organized a county wide | $3,00.
Hogs 1.809; holdovers 305; generally steady; 160 to 250 lbs., $3.65 to #3.65; t< |> #3.70; 2.V» to :5O0 lhs„ #3.50 to #3.55; 300 lbs. up. #3.35 to #3.45; J TO to 100 lbs., #8.50 to $3.60; 130 Ut 140 lbs., #3 2o to #3.10; light pigs
Putnam #2.00 to #2.75; packing sows #2.50 to
A letter ha.- been received by E. W. Baker, county agent, from L. E j Hoffman, a.-.-istaut •siunty agent leader, I’mdue university, who was assistant director in this wheat *ci lion, stating that the board of rei view at Washington had passed on , the wheat contracts in Putnam eoun- , ty. Putnam county’s priority number is 103. 'This is the order in which checks will he written, considering all wheat cj unties in the country. Definite date for distribution of local wheat check- is as yet unknown.
ONLY SIX MEN IN (lllMY FINISH WORK. MEDALS \KK (W\KDED
I l\ KSTOt K H WDLKRS S TRIKE CHICAGO, Nov. 28, (UP) Police rml -quads were called today to the ( hi, ag" -tockyacd- where a Irik, of livestc k handler- threatened to de-
\ e|op eriolis v ioloie e.
An armi.-tice that was called in Ihe ^ lahur dispute yesterday noon ended i at 8 a m. and officials railed for (>o
(('ontinifed on Page twoy
20 Years Ago IN t.REENt'ASTLS
Greencastle defeatel the Plainfield
Wau.se of Thanksgiving A turkey , haVp a | n . adv held; Cattle 2.500: calves 7(8); large' high school basketball team, 27 to 19. i I. A. Dicks. Fillmore, 78 pounds •himer is p^misod proimptly at ^ ,V p.tmrsting meeting They | , t eer run all weights: most interest ; The local lineup included Small. Mar- , per bushel, 99.2 bushels per ace, stl-
s|»ecial beyond
and all time in
gram need not extend tegular elusing time
.A siczial Thanksgiving variety proktaiii in wuiich a dozen or more britieH from the local club will purticlI’ale i« prumised to the meiribership. '8|iec.ial prizes for those having feet attendance records during the ten weeks intensive attendance campaign, will also be distributed at this
time.
| Due to weather condition.- and the low price of corn only six men in I’utnam county finished their five- | acre com plots this fall, it was announced at the county agent'.' ul- : fire Tuesday. Plots were checked by Waltei Har(M'l, < raw ford.-villr, state
. inspector.
Putnam county five-acre iluh memiiers average 85.2 bushels per acre, ' one member, L. A. Di.ks of Filina iv, I having a yield of 99.2, or lacking 1 J of a bushel of winning a g'obl medal, j Putnam county members and their |
I yields follow:
I Otis t’lodfelter, Russallvillc, 81
■ pound.- |»’r bushel. 76 bushels per . — I aciv, bronze medal. * Homer und Giant < onant, elderly
pounda | Roacbdale men. an -< heduled to g" on tiial in ciruiit eourt Wednesday
Coiuuil Trial Is Srt WiMlnrsdav
ROAt IIDALE MEN \l I.KGKD It) H AYE DRAW 8 W KAI’ON (*N
FRED < TVER
members are asked to be on | '' l,ntinue this work, bringing ,>n lights but others al-o receiving at tin. O’Bnen, McIntosh and ( rump, oriier tliat the s|»ecial pro" *' )pa ] 0| . he,-,, to discuss poultry aiiditention; early trade -ti'aig (to 25; Fred Hixon was slightly injured
ver medal.
J. M. Dobbs, Fillmore, 67
charges of •drawing
Reis were miametrically opposed to the statement- of Gov. Janie. Rolph, Jr., ef Californiu, wbj approved the lynching of two kidnaper slayer at
San Jose Sunday night
After pounding ,n doors, bursting in those that were not opened iminedialefy. ainl earchilig man' po sibh hiding place the trooper irre.-ted
the follow ing cil izeiis:
Irving \dkins, a ;'• ia| poU inialt. William Hearn, a farmer. “Rusty” Heath, no oeeupatiuti.
William Thoinp.-roii.
They were held undei guard foi arraigniiient lielnie a magistrate here, i whereupon they were Is, taken by the trin per- to Baltimore. 'The ;oliliers. meat.lime, pve- <• | the ^-e.arch
for the others
® i?> § -v> H O Today # Weather ^
ami G
t?! 1 Local Temperalurf ® ® ® ® ® ty & ® ® ® ; Inciea.-ing cT tidiness tonight; deadly j probably followed by ome rain Wed-
potind- i weapon on Fred L. Clark, also of | nesday. not much change in lempera-
All
meetings, office, or
their problems,
are invited to attend the»i ' j njf y oU will eome in the
te ’ stud a iant with your name and uddress. your name will la- put on the poultry mailing Bat and you will re- , eive notices of meetings and helpful hints.” said Mr. Baker. Also watch the Farm Nows columns of The Ban-
ner $acb week.
pooltr, , . j.jgher* than la.-t week: bulk I when his auto c Hided with an A mar I par m hel, 87 I bushel., per acre*
sil-
$
steers $5.26 to $»'-.<H); she stock i ican Express strong: most heifers $3,'25 to $o.0t); lam Stewart
.-ows #2.18) to $".< M ); l«w cutters und j son and I.ibcrty streets. A -baft of
w ygon driven by \\ il,it the corner of .lliek-
cutters $1.(10 to #2.00; vealers $6.00
down.
Sheep 1,200; lambs -trong to higher; bulk ewe and wethers $7.00 to #7.29; bucks #1.00 less; throw-outs down to f l.oo
the wagon pierced the windshield, striking Mr Hixon. Miss Delilah Miller was hostess to tlie Boston *'lub. Dr. S. ,11. Town was u visitor in
Indianapolis.
Roaehdale.
ver medal. Both men wen
Paul Metiaughey, Russellv ille, 77 Miller they wer-
pound- per bushel, 70.5 bushels per ; tlneutenel Clark
acre, bronze modal. i rifle.
. YV. N. McMullen, Rcuchdale, 71 Prosecutor 'The dote (rawley pounds per bus-hel, 95.7 bushels per | handle the state' euse against acie, -ilver medal. t’enants, while Ch'.irles Metiaughey is ( . J Ragan, Fillmore, 82 pounds , attorney for them and will present
par bushel, 70.6 bushels por acre. I the defense.
Uirc.
urested August t .ilb'ged to have uth a 22 calibre
will the
Minimum . .
33
6 a. m
35
7 a. m
33
8s. in
36
10 a. m
50
11 a. m. •
55
12 noon
57
1 p. in
59
