The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 November 1933 — Page 4

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UU, DAILY L!ANNUL GREENCAS'ILE INDIANA. IHURSDAY. NOVLMBER 30. 1933.

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BLANKETS I sol ul And Practical (iit'ts SPECIAL OFFER 7^ \ «l I’art Wool I’lai I BLANKETS $2.98 p - 72 \ t* I Pari W ool I’laH BLANKETS All Colors — Special $2.49 Pa,r 70 x HO P aid Cotton BUNKETS $1.49 Pair

KING LOUS XIV SUNK MILLIONS IN OZARK HILLS

KXI’I.OKA'l IONS FOB tiol.lt \M> SI I, V KB I Alf.KD I WKM H Bl’I.KB

70 x 80 Plaid Single Blankets —* Each S. C. PREVO COMPANY

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THE HOME STOKE

DEM Kit Mr I KMPI.OYES » • (il \KI> (iOl.H SUPPLY ( H\ W. K. Dickinson, United Piess Staff Corn By S|)ecial ,'eon*-sion t l' , “ United States I'n i -ury Dc^irtnfent.) a ¥ s ® . DE.NYKR. I P) Klevc^i yearaifo five (Ic-'orate bandits startled the nation *\i . a hold robbery of a federal resene bank tru k in front of the Denvo- mint. They obtained

JOPLIN, Mo., (UP)—Kinn- LouiXIV of France and John Law, maste: l>f(.motor, sink $200,000,000 into ex travauant mine explorations in the Ozark reKioti, and went bankrupt. Yet, in thij tri-state area of Missouri, Arkan.- i- and Kansas ahme more than a million dollars’ worth, ot lead and /im i"iieentiat%s have been

mined.

how to cse w irr mash A wet or moist UTash for layint! pullets, if used prni'erly, will serve the (Mirphse of a iafety

j inoltinu* or for otiher reasons tlu* pro- • lUCtion is dropping off, mix the moist I layinjr mash w ith milk- I he milk is an added stimuli and works well in

KiiifT Louis, yay and spendthrift ruler, Tfrantol letters of patent in 1712 to all of the 0*irks, then a part of the Loui-iami territory owned !>\ the French, to explore fully the re

trion for silver and tjold. The .M i>-fv-i |V|n ('mi party,

moled by Law. profits in which

$200,000 and • Today, sa\ -uperintendc u tiling could n

“IN

fir-t let 1 * L That 1922 ro robbeiy. It truck fit th

tried to rob tl

He ranp: fo “Did someo - i’ Tar in n man appearo “Yes,’’ wa-

re- | “Come on,'

ent. “I’ll sin

0 I to roh vi re find a let , f

Pullets that ale ;ayln |ier cent and sho.v n I injpa in production i

moist mash

A fl<K'k .f hi r Is I cent and still <»n tin lie fed a moist fatti itjiy Give the In i d

in twenty nun sume Ih'I.wis'Ii IK'r hundred ii teninir ma-h w slow up produ the birds in ^i

visa hie to old i ’1

mash.

If ti pullt t flock per cent, a fee of each da> will havt crease prodiudi m

aroun li fifty

> siirns of drop*ed not, he fed a

d-

d

it.tr fifty per nctx'a.si* should tur mash each all they will etd They’ should eon-

an three pounds ,er day. Thi- falive a tendency to

and help to keep esh. It is not adto ti fattening

If

careful

The flo,

I try man wi ' ' \t •

ni ean he pre\ ent that will averatre |ir.i uction till ost profitable.

1 use a nrh or md winter

shared b.v the kintr- undertook I le 1 I followed exploration work. Phillip Renault, • f heavy dm

one of the kintr's master miners, eompanied hy fidO black slaves fro

ml a number of e its, come to t’ne <>:

An

<entury the French

tliriufirli the

ilver and jrdd. The iintities of zim- am!

MlfTiOBi: HUNTEII NAML1) COPEK K.in (I P li.v L .homn. a inicrolu- Imn:ei lor 12

o

- lire< ol ih. K III-

Washbiirn

s not layint;- i i mist, layinjr n a t 1 ndency !' If the flock

ifty -ish'

roil Was M it

lalmi a ti tin in n iml. as f. Ima

Hi

Crashed Right Into Jail

San Doming" pert mineral" arks in 171D.

For* half

miners prow setuchintr I r found Itirtte

lewd. „ Following Hie French dehacle in i)/"i k mine explorinfft I '.■l ine. The , were better miners. I hey found deposit- of silver in eaves, hut r lhey foul .: ,ni\ prm able ii -e . i rii - history fails to reveal them. The fiist real discovery in t ie Joplin field was made by an Indian. 11kivid Harland, half-breed Cherokee I from North Carolina. Harland found lead al ntr Sin al ( reek near 111.- pi' ent site of Joplin in IH.'la. Ilowiwer, William Tingle, a Scotchman, genet ally is iTetiited with ha\ ing been the first ininei- in tin field. Sin e the discovery of the tri-slate area, mote than five times a- mu-li lead and zinc havq been mined ami soil I uis Xl\ siiuamlered in “lo-

eatiltK’' ;1 »

overlook at mored

t hr unl- adin

\ - it stop

armed with e;l le about appeared he- «> alder. A lentr room ;i “And at e\ uik' which tl.eiee there Skinner smil Under th; c Id bars, w eie unloadi There are But suppo t i rush that to the huildi guards in th'

Even so,

would profit

raid.

For the in which the against cure even then hi Penh,ups, \ eeiine, and | might he abl side the gre

- apel. killing a guard. - .Mark A. Skinner, of the mint, smh a • "i i r. ot wh\," he said, “hut t this thing straight: diery was not a ‘mint’ i as the robbery of a lint. No one ever h is mint.” a guard. -ay there was a load " he asked, when the the reply. aid the superintemlyou why anyone Vho M uck here now would in through a couple We stood itt a winthe truck entrance, was hacking up to . alf dozen guards, !es, formed a halfAhruptly a guard us with a rifle at hi« • ven window of the rmed man stood window of the buiMout up m that entiiolher armed man,” ite live screen six more than $120,1)00 ■ r piecautions, too. porate gang were ' door, gain entrance md take captive the nidor. chances are they ng by their daring of dollafs in gold keeps as leserve -sOi would not i-d. available. lynamite, nitrogly- > of time, the gang ■ eir way in-. \ aults.

Arrested following the ern'h of a mystery plane nt Los Angeles, three of the men shown here were identified by Ati and M W S Kelly as the kidnap bandits who abducted them recently and ohbed Kelly’s employer of s,"io. William J. Bmn.- (rear iigh'l. Walter Pritchard (front left) and Clarence Lund (right) an the th ■ %sed Lunde J. iJcvcr is the mao rear leiu Below, the v raekage of their plane.

Principals in what Dallas, Tex., police say is a tragedy of the "eternal triangle." Top right, Mrs. Pearl Hall who was lured from her home

by two women and taken to the residence of L. W irt Boone (left), where, after she had been accused of being “too intimate” with him. she was shot to death. Boone's wife. Mrs. Mary Boon" (lower right), is held in

connection with the crime.

Quartet of New Treasury Aides zTi

Something Nude in Weddings

Three four men figure in the reshulfle of the U. $.°Trea ury Department xhuh got underway with the appointment of Henry Mergenthau, Jr., a Acting .Secretary during Secretary Woodin’* leave of ah.-ence. Top *' ' " Ad ...live ’ lower laftP ri< oert t,ii-ten, -Special A atant in charge of puhli. relation-; top ■ ight. Ilcrnian ® iinhant, General Coun-el, and rlarle liaillie. "fiscal vlvuer." ate directly rc.-potu,ihle to Acting Secretary .Moigenthau.

Thi- uniHual wedding* erenmny, shown in prngr, iS( took plac^rreently al Uie “Elysia” nudist colony, near Lake El more, Cal. The happy couple, Susie Wise and Jim Goodman, tu^- the marital vows us the Rev. < larke Irvine pronounces them man and wile. At left, Constance Allen, bridesmaid, and at right, James Mack, best man. Al* worn their “birthday suits.” s

EFFECTS OF NBA PROGRAM WORRY CANADIAN FIRMS

THREE IMPORTANT INDUSTRIES OF DOMINION FEEL REACTION MONTREAL (DP) The farreaching effects of President Roosevelt’s National Recovery Act soon may force Canada to seriously re consider her fiscal eWitftude towards the Dnited Statis. At least thrre Important Canadian industries fishing, newsprint, and .-hipping—are threatened seriously hy the operations of the NRA. It is pointed out here that even tltoiifih Canada air ady has enjoyed some compensating advantages as a tesult of currency inflation in the Dili • ! States through the placing of large export orders, with Canadian branches of U. S. companies, it has become evident that the effec s of the NRA cannot be confined to the Dnited States. Iti-poii« indii'ate that some hus-liie-s interests in the Dnited Status are -eeking to use the NRA either a- a tariff harrlei against Canadian products or as a means of getting Canadian I eve rape to servv their own domestic purposes. These reports reveal that a D. S. fisheries organization recenily visiteil Washington and requested I aders ol the NRA to exclude Canadian fish Item yie American tnarke:. Even though the body was (old. acloriliug to reports, that It went fo the wrong off ic-' and that H slioulil have applied pi the Tariff Dotnmlssi'n. the action is seen here as an indication of (he use (o which prl vale eominereial interests would put the NRA machinery. It has been revealed, too, that newsprint manufacturers in the United States would like to use the NRA to “stabilise” their market situation at the expense ot Canadian mills. The American mills, it is staled, have proposed that (lie Importation of newsprint into their country be prohibited if th" price is less than $45. A third NBA project relates to tap shipping business on the Great l«'ikes. It is to ported that American vessel ownut’s would like to be brought under a fair trade practices code, which would provide thim with fixed minimum cargo lutes on grain, coal, iron ore. and other it< ms of Dpper Lakes w ater transportation A fix d minimum of live or six cents for grain carriage would be beneficial to American ssc] owners, hut would be useless unless Canadian vissel own-rs could In' induced l fall in line and not offer transportation at a lower ra'e, experts said. Farmer Wrote F.D.R. For Loan SFRINGKIELD, Mo.. (Ul’t I'resiih nt Roosevelt can’t s| are the I cash just now to lend a Greene county farmer the $l<i() he wanted to borrow. The fanner wrote Mr. Roosevelt: “i thot i vvoul l rite a litle leter and I

GRASs'AIM Tonight and Tomorrow

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His Bi^est Flume S ^

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was a vs/ v Red-IIol Mununu!

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CHARLES “CHIC” SALE. DO ROTH! MACKAILL, WILLIAM BOYD

F. D. R. Shows the Sights

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let op

you know that i

shore hard

President Roosevelt acta as guide, pointing out the s.Rht.. •• Js distinguished guests at the "Little White House'' in W arm ■ pr-VJ Left to right, General Hugh Johnson, NRA ch W U. S. Ambassador to Soviet Russia. John J. Ua k"U tenner national Comm’t'ee chairman and th® Preside"' . _ Ousted After Mexican Escat

upan:

“i am oful hard up but i am still strong for you -if i hail a litle helup i could get along, wont you please send me H)0 dollars, a.- soon as i get ' n my feat i will shore pay il back, please rite at otve as i am shore hard up. i shore did work for you in the election and done you a lot of good, please send me the lot) as soon as you ran. i am shore hard j

up."

. ' secretary to the piesident wrote! the f nnier that the president appreciated his stipp it, but that the presi- ! 'lent did n t have the $l(in to

right now.

The farmer’s letter, with a notation t iat his cast' b<; investigate,) und relief extended, was forwarded from Washington to relief officials here. SWEDEN’S FRUIT EXPORTED STOCKHOLM (DID Sweden this Jem hud ,i fruit etttn if tinprere* dent d size. Instead of the usual Itnl’°" foreign fiuD. a eonsldetable export of Swedish fruit to the eon I In**nt has occin red. During Oct' her no b’ss than 71 iaf1"uy ears, eaeli bearing 10 tons, were shipped abroad. Th ■ greaHr part of tlt'se shipments hive gop,, Southern Germany and Dzerboslovakla. UPHOLDS RACK SEATERS LINCOLN. Net, (DP) ah woman "backs, at di lve.s"*fi n ,| Nebraska haven l< r their prac'lce and (I Supmne Court says Its all right in t o. In a r cent decblon. the high tribunal made hack scat driving by ^vlveijiobligatory and held that “she may he reapotiKlhl" for the conse luencHH of h.r own negllgenee In* falllngato warn h r husband of nn approachinjg danger,"

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Ft iff .. Madge. E'am?

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Although he denies the “deplorable behavior” of v h “ ^ ^(,1, Mexican authorities, w ho charge he appeared drsp 1 ' ,t » P , 'J <he balcony of his hotel in Mexico City and hni ' " l , n ,rh ‘ l »f Mexican Cailets, I,ee Tracy, dynamic film , .’n" •f movieland dosed to him a a result ol the cam • ' ' ult , iM ' by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Observers say Iho "" ' ’ nnoe known "last straw.” a Tracy's career in movie t ' 1 ’!,! a sueressi'in of escapades that hronght grey Inn 1 ’ ■xecutives. The “bad boy” of Hollywood can be ’J 1 H # ikes, us wititisa him in a tender scene with * the lilny that brought hnu

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