The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 December 1933 — Page 4
THE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. SATURDAY. DECEMBER 30. 1933.
VkO i I'.CiT YOUR SKIN fro^ CHAPPING
i. (I
/•M R kin v,ill { r in\v r.-'fir-i' nnil rhi k in Hf"♦lefensc it you allow it to In- c happed and dried hy the cold. Always, he tore you go out, protect your tkin with a tilm of cream under your powder. Fli/abeth Arden suggests one ot these:
War Vet and Murdered Son
\ i- m linn A moretta ('ream: Aileli. ate vanishing cream, fine and fragrant. Keeps the 'I 'm ;.,fr and smooth, prevents root'll ness and chapping, f i, fi. ‘Venetian t 'Itra - Amoretta Cream: '1 lie same cream; tlightly oilier, tor a dry
Haky skin. Softens and smooths the skin, a Hatrering powder toundation. \ enetiun Creme de I raneet An excpii att- lini- Inn:' and iirot&ctivc cream. -\ hecomingand protective base tor powder. /1.25.
1 uzs acrji Arm v’ / cuctiihi 7 lilfl Preparations tih' on talc at S. C. PRKVO COMPANY
SEARCH BEGUN FOR SITES OF OLD KINGDOMS
iCHINKSK SCHOLARS THK I’Will) PROVINCES
GRANADA MYRNA LOY WALTER HUSTON
SEEK
Karp Fiiutn, disabled war veteran, of Seymour, Conn., who was ordered held for iiueatinning in connection with the death of his 10 year-old son Peter, above, whore murdered body was found in the woods near his home. The boy, who had bc"n missing overnight since he went skating the previous day, was strangled to death with his own necktie.
YOUTH (*. n\<;s 2 Tt UKKYS FORT WORTH, T. n (UP)- Nine-year-old Hobby I ; was the envy of his playmates, a well as some of his lather’.- friend . when . bavged two wild turkeys "i> : tn nt-itwi-j tly with a party of bn lm men- The youth was the only • i in t patty to bag it turke,\
NR \ 41 Oi l) .R \|)l VTI S
BATON ROUGE, J.a. (UP)-The e:nj 1 oyment relief (irogram of the national government ha- en.iide.l a number of Eoui-iana State Univer-
sity eia uates of the 11 rim. partin'.nt to obtain positions announce! by .1 J. I.as alle. tin college -d eiigi'ieering’.
rinu deil was dean of
Figures in Family Drama
Curb Follows I»ig Hoard l |
By H- R. Ekias Unitei Preca Staff C>rres|i ndent PEIPING, Cldna, (I T P)- Excavations to uncover the sites of ancient Chinese Kingdoms which existed 12 cent uric. - before Christ are to h:> mad by the Central Research Academy in Shantung Provin. e Piv I ini inary work already is un fc'r way. Tung Tos-ping of Shanghai, a fellow of the Central ib -earvh A ndcirry, is directing the work He is being ride l by Wang H icntanu. a noted Ch'nese rcholar who hea l the Shantung Pmovireial library. Tlie .xcavat ion - ar? being made at Tenkh.-ien, Choehsien and Yihsien in Shartung Piov-
ince.
'Phc Chine e scienlista, Greeting the excavation?, hope to unearth inv rtarit art objeots tearing <>u the culture of the S ate of Lu, a p rir. .lality rf feu bl time which was established by j a brother cf the founder . f the Chou • Dynauty-1122-255 B. C The fief was situated in Southwestern Shantung
■d one if the mo t i;:tercst : ng chapi: is of curb exchange dealings in
|!t:«. As sin > after ta'.c nwung n-j Province And while politically petty it ) to line hi pioliibitic! repeal, Canadi- achieved a high stale of civilization-
WHISKEY SHARES
ON DRY LAW
REPEAL
Hy Wayne ('■ Itiitler
(United i’resa Financial Writer) NEW YORK. (UP)—Curb st icks
an liquor stock -yurted to new highs. _, Rapid dcpri :. ' ui of th- dollar sent I' k ^ ^ • i> dd mining -locks soaring. Growing indications of success in the government effort to stabilize coiaiitions in liie peti leu n industry formed a Ise ky round for u spectacular advance in oil shares, while the? biisk revival n the motor imlustry
:lni * attracted bnyi 1 to
joined other security markets o.nluodities in a move toward higher
levels in 1!)33.
Altlio'-igh the Roosevelt priceraising pr gntm constituted a big factor ir thi ri e, th ■ market also .'.,. iv»d timulus fron a general improvement
in hu.-inoss with its train of favorable ! ‘>ry that infla; on . arnings reports an i increased divi- industry since rati
fiends.
Public interest in curb stocks exI'Ui ilcd along with the increased activity on tli " “big Imard” and sales for 1!)33 t tale i' ajjproxiirately !)8,- • •.(KU) hart s, compared with only 57,fl') r i, (ix shares in li)32. Trading in ' urb bon i- appioximated ^046,000,00''. -lightly ie-s than the 1032 total- ■ The ur-wii g in curb stocks follaweil the teojiening of the nation’s bmks in March. Responding to vari'.t i flationary measures and the brightening picture of business conditions, the market pursued its upward course until the middle of July when it reached its 1033 peak. In the final half of the year trains were inclined to take profits on die theoiy that the industrial pickup j 1 :d Immji tea. vigorous and sudden to 1 aetaii .' d. A i>ig business fail >■ to ;Knln ground in the fall, curb stocks I 1 clinqui hed ahrut half of their sum- , mer gains, hut near Die year-end the arket level above its OctoberNovembor trading range. Ah'Vi .1 'ait of 1 idled Press curb -tuck averages reflected a price trend imilar to that prevailing on the stock « \chiing“. Starting the year at T.iiO, nirb averages slipped to 11 low for
Uni live MViir- j v 'hich
t.aine I
ities.
Public utiiitii were an fxception to the ger.eral trend, and 1 aders of this category lost fiom 10 to 2.'> |H'r cent "f their value during the year Power -hares were sold heavily on the the-
ml hamper the are fived by law.
A tn 1 I t'svaid inunicip'il ownership ml lowf 1 im'i also de|)r: ssed ulilitic, \‘ latih nidu.-: 1 ial locks ,-purted ala id, I ut inv .-taunt tru-ts lagge b-diiml the market.
Confucius was horn in Lii in 551 B C. Tlie latter days of Lu al > produced M nc.'us a: I to Tzu. two oth ers of Cliina’s m. t lanuni. philosoph-
ers.
Pending the o’ltcome of the excavations being carried on by the Oi.trill Research Academy most of what is known of the ancient Kii gdo ns for 1 . catch is being made is conii; the Ch’un Ch'iu, the last literary work of Confucius. It record* the annals of the State of l.u for 242
Sunday Mat. Nipht Monday Nipht 0TT0 KRUGER © ' n ‘ I HE PRIZE FIGHTER AM) THE LAD^ ” - ADDED NEWS - (OMI |»\ MICKEY Mill >1; illltllllllllllilillllllllllillih TON 10! 11'! -ON If^.'I'U.! THIb HOOSII OAVAI II-:k»S nder the direction nf VIRGINIA HOWES
'he I
fr-m I)-" stag" nf I'healer, St Eoui-. THE S( RKEN — W VI.I. \t I 1 11|,’|i
“EAST OF FIFTH AVENUE"
Some
ci's — 10 an4 2ic at N:3ll Tonight
years up to within two years of tlie life of Rev. J. W dleath of Confucius in 4.1) it t l Boyle County lb I matrimony 4,528 MINISTER MISSED DEPRESSION y " he hu 1 I average two a v. DANVILI.E, Ky , (I P)- There j declare I, “and 1 never has tven ary depression in the ,0 divorce court.-,
Pari
At Brilliant Opening ot Metropolitan Opera
Mrs. Dorothea Irene Turley, of St. .lohns, Ariz., pictured with her son David, and her 15-year-old daughter, Mattie. Ac ordinc to the (ory ot ',he daughter, who is awaiting sentence on a charge oi otn inpteil murder, her mother, who once won the t itle of the “A mer Fan Venc de Mil",” ordered her to lioiit her father, Ernest Turley (m"t), in onl. 1 that hi
might maintain a friendship with u huml ome cowhoy.
!.).,., or. A’ ril t at 5- 83 ■ ‘I he summer '•'illy carrried the index up to a high "I it) *.n July 13, while at the yearend it was slowly rising after touch-
ing !).50.
Speculation in whiskey shares form-
“ACTS )l GOD” rop IDRI ST EIRE LIST WASHINGTON, (UP)- "Acts of God,’’ onci mh • fun hi- by Helen Hayes, now ore M'ng 1 otnriety in inoth-r I'ield of endeavor—ns cau-es of 'orest ’ires. < > d< rok'• . heretofore top | ranking in the li-t of 1 I'.-o ■ of uch ) conflagrations, • < iv celegnted to sej"nd elate in .he list, bel w lightning, for thi . . ■ ■ ' iccoi 'bug to 1 figures it lensi'd liy the Office of N'atioiio! Pi.rk-, li .idoig an I’c-orva-
i, ions.
l.ightning wn ri -pons’lde for bl forest fire- ioi'inc the pas' season, the figure -li wd, while smokers starte.i only 71 Arno B. C'lTtmerer. directer .1 tin ..ffice, at ributc, this to edjcational a^th ities of many organi/cition Uiiougli ut the country and 0 • 1 iter d re rn the ):art of the general public 'to co-operatc in stair it g out this sourge of America’s woidiunds.
Prince Chosen by Hitler as Reich Regent
D. T SN \ K E RE \LLY EXISTED IN THIS RATTLER KFRNA II.1.1 , Cal (UP)—A snake uch as i.- as-, lat-d usually with bad dreams wa- killed near liere recently by Bril Walker, Jr-, of Keystone. ‘ I no 1 ptile, a hattle-nake, was six feet H 1 inch I mg, weighed 25 1-2 bounds, ha,| 14 rattle , an 1 was an dliiii". Its eyes were p nk and its ho v a mottled ping and rad. The stake's body was sent to Uni- i versity of Southern California -'or study
Dictator’s Mother
A section nf the famous “Diamond Horseshoe" in the Mctropolilun Opera House, New York, on the opening night of the new season. For the first time in half a century, the season opened with an An.i l ican op. 1 a, "Peter Ibbetson," by Drama Taylor. At left, \li-.
Cornelius Vanderbilt, uncrowned rpi. • ■ opera-goers, as she arrived; right, .b lc and his fiancee. Miss Eileen Gille-.| cynosure of all eyes at the brilliant |. are to be married earl;’ in the Spring.
- the
U. S. Control May Result From Stock (^ui/
MNl £. ALlXANOLH
CHAMUiLLOU HITLER
hebmam goer ink;
Senator Duncianu Ftu tomer,
According to Berlin report*, Chancellor Adolf Hitler ha* selected Prince Alexander Ferdinand, only son of Prince Yugust \\ ilhelin, fourth son of the former Kaiser, to succeed him as head man in Germany when he no longer can carry the torch. The Prince, who is 21, is a member of Hitler’s Nazi organization. Recently he turned iti Ir ■ brown shirt to become a private in the German regular army to be trained for the post of Reich Regent. Aii xander’a mother, Princess Alexandria, divorced hi father in 1920. Later, as the wife of Arnold ken sun, naval ollicer, she took up residence in the United States. Opposition to Hitler’s plans for the Prince ia «xp,.ted from Herman Gwering, ibe Chancellor's chief aide, who, it is said, is looking forward to ruling Ganaanv after Hitler.
The first portrait ever published of Madame Ekaterina Dztigashvili, aged mother of Josef Stalin, dictator of the Soviet, Union. The photo *’** made by Margaret BourkeWhite, world-famous woman photographer, at the home of Mine DlUftihvili at Tiflig, U. S. S. R.
MbRG/AfxT
!bwk r ai!d bi»nk^ng*Jn'ac“es n «’a , ‘v n ‘lH'a? r r n?y . Comn ‘ iu ‘ ,p ' "’h'l’h spent the last year inv -tigatir" W* Dum-an I.Tni,.1 ,J , U F 11 lilt during the coining se. - ion of Congress, according
;ch >un
come tax laws. Adv.ieates of 'iGsh.riil' .» i
,u_» ■ atock control cite ruling of U S Suprania Court Justice 1
rial teguiatmlrof |hn ^do.Tb' xrhan'ge "rl,"' | Vhl> "' v,,al,, <l U.at ’rccomniendations' will he made sc scalpel of Ferdinand Pero.a euunseUor th®" U to thw 111 which came to light under the liead of the great linsneial t,,„, ..l, 1 \ r *h p committee, who quizzed such btg money men ns J. I ue great Imam „| house. I hurle- ]•: Mitchelf, former head of the ml City Ban! at
'} "’"al Bank, legislation will also be proposed to stop l""pb , d'
that Cong rasa may dany wtl of mails to'm.y
I St. o
as uomiu welfare*
:LeU under conditions do«uj«d injnrio)
anden pubiit
