The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 16 January 1934 — Page 3
lassified ads —For Sale— t'MMAfrK SALR—At the Court Thursrtay, Ja'>- at !( A. M. lfi-2ts. AY FOR SALB:— tlrxxl haM othy. Cl^arvifw Sto<-k Farm, 3 1-2 north on Rofut . r >9. Rmr.il, Tn«i-15-2ts. —For Rent— OR liKN'T OR SALE: 71-aoro adjoining Hanrrirk Station. Wilson. • IK-gp OR RENT:— 7 room modorn B-arapo, iMinipr^i with Elpctrir i,oration, (jas stovo. flood rondiPliono 72. 15-3t Ir RKNT:—5 room pomi-modorn p, lights, wntor and j?ns. Clo*** in. 77S-K or ('.05. 3t. ;)R RENT:—Modern homp, fnm-fii-pplarp, hardwo.vl floors, frnr- \ i conditinn. Fhonp 14(5. 21-tf. —Wanted— ANTED: \ny kind of do.ad stock. 278, Orppncastlp. Wp pay all y. .. John Wachtel Co. 24-tf M iscellaneoui— b A\< K at Banner Club Wodneslintrht. Music hy McCartney’s orltia. \i!m. 15 cents. Ip.
OVJES
\l I HE (.HAN ADA now Marlene Dietrich, different her mill ■e*f« admlrerg ever irlimp-.d in her previous n, will U cn in "The Sony iher new Paramount pic ' unii: to the Granada theater Iht. Dietrich, who hitherto has aped a- a .phisticated, worldly L n, revealed in her new proJi - , an innocent youny country (. f rare beauty, wlio yoes to Rer3ml, jilted hy a handsome young M i, iun the gamut of tiaeic iem e. marries a rich and elderly p: . whom she does not love, and, ring their divorce, slip becomes 1 disillusioned, and a notorI woman in the gay German city’s I: lie he s.ing of Songs,” adapted from literiry classic of Hermann Sme inn. was directed hy Reuben nli.in. T is is the fiist Dietri. n whirh ha not been directed by |' vorrr. Josef von Sternberg, i ilstanding cast of actors apsupport of the glamorous ho recently has commanded dtention of the worltl as the or (f the tri users for women • vogue.
THE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. TUESDAY. JANUARY 16. 1934.
Roomer Testifies In Wynekoop Case
VETERAN ('HICAGtt TE.Af HI K’ ON STAND AS W ITNESS FOR STATE CHICAGO, Jan. 16, (UP) — Enid Hennessey, veteran high school teacher, today revealed how the city’s strongest murder truck suddenly into hei workaday life in the home of her longtime friend, l>i Alice Lind sny Wyneknnp. Testifying as a state witness in Dr. Wynekoop’. trial on charges ( ,f murdering her daughter-in-law, lihetn, Afis-- Hennessey’s sympathies obviously were with her old friend, who sat silent and garbed in black a few feet away. Dr. Wynekoop. whose riti al phy sleal condition has caused much ap prehension was refreshed when -I,, apreareil ill Judge Joseph li David’s courtroom. Slie ihad enjoyed a good sleep during the night an I was prepared to watch the state buiht tin their theory of cold blooded murder against her. Her nerves were steeled fm- what ever revelations might come. Her at tornoys, Frank Tyrrell and W. \V Smith, explained to her the manne; in which Assistant State's Attorney Clinrles ,S. Dougherty likely would build up his theory of murder to oh tain insurance money and she said wh never testimony would he given would provide little .-hock. A throng of spec.ators almost CRiial to the crush the opening dn\ of the trial .was attract. I today. Retween two aral three thousand persons were gathered in halls anil con idors.
CUBANS HAIL CARLOS HEM A AS PRESIDENT
GRADUATE OF l. S. \\\\i At ADK\M \( < FITS EXE( I 'FIVE OFFICE
H : I i * * work of rebuilding t)>0 g..> -1 emment was inaugurated . only lat.•merit was. "I am the president." Meanwhile, Dr. Antonio Guiteras,) the retiring minister of war and the j interior who maneuvered into power.! had Ms hands full lining up his leftist foil iwers, who fought their way to the top after other factions believed I they h:«l the situation sewed up for the veteran nationalist leader Carlos Mendieta. Heviu, despite his leftist tiffilintions has ties binding hint to the lightest*. He ha been closetv con i necteil with the sugar industry for l.'ii yi: rs. He i the youngest president J Cuba has ever had and is one of the few if not the only—Cuban gradtt- j ate of the American aval academy in Anr.apolis PHONEY WOODEN PISTOL I All.Ell IN ESCAPE PI.OT WAUPU.N. Wis. (UP)—Earl Loveday. serving a life sentence for mur ilering ■ jroli eman in 1!)10. httd a t rent idea and it would have won his freedom had it not l.eren for the sharp eyes f Dei.tin Warden William llinkatnp. Loveday fashioned a wooden pistol out of a table hoard with a stolen i raz.>: blade, and -aninoil it blue with \ ink. Re . nth he pointryl it at Ilin | k.amp while in Dio l.athroom of the J pi Ison, and ordered the officer t>. back against the wall. Hinkimp no | ticed the pistol was fake w hen he saw j t it the ink had nut bqon distributed, evenly. Me overpowered the convict. i now in atari cnfincur'i' I
Home Oil Company
KEITH HALL
EVERY SE< ll(i\ (IE COl N IKA II I RtiPHIEs (11 (iKIDIRDN t'HK'AGO. (I P: Every section of
the country has it; traditional trouhic of the gridiron. They serve to intensify the rival)y between many
of the nation’s leading teams. In the midwest two such time-hid'
lowed trophies have been objects which enlivened annual gridiron hat- ————— — ———
• . a. 0. It wa used origin
•sting histories. ially by .Michigan as a waler container
, on the football field.
Announces . That he has assumed manauemunt of Home Oil Co., Service Station, North Jackson St., at the Monon. He invites all his friends to visil him and try BONDED “78" 172 ASOLINE 1*
i:kfi;( t \vinti:r (.asolink
tfontething StiieAS
•ilk /(ilf® KEITH HALL, Manager
685 N. Jackson St. Greencastle, Indiana
IK E OE ADMINISTRATION lice D hereby given that the 11 igned his been appointed by fudge of the Circuit Court of Min County, State of Indiana, iu-1 rutor of the estate of Joanna linden, late of Putnam County, red. j id 1 hate is supposed to hr solp in W. Earnsh.-tiw, Xdministmtor. In. 15, 1!I34. Itorney, Win. H Havorly. ]: -e No. 7482. |l it W. Herod, Clerk of the Put1 Circuit Court. 16-3t.
riK E (II \DMINISTR ATION | ' is herein given that the r iied htts been appointed i.y I- 1 1 ig. i f the < ir. tiit Court of t 1 * ounty, State of Indiana, f -ti itor "f the estate of John |> ith, late of Putnam Countv, de Vi. lid estate is supposed to iw sol I'.h.'i' L. Smith, Administrator. I!t:i4 'yt. Gillen & Lyon. » No TW ■ |l 1 \V Henid, < Jerk of 1 he I’ut < iretdt Couit. 2-3t
Political Announcements
HAVANA, Jan. 1C. ( trio- Hevia, 33 year old graduate of the United States naval academy, accepted the pre-i'lency of Cuba last night aftei u chaotic day during which nobody knew who was running the country. While bullets of guardsmen whizzed outside the presidential pulare and three supporters < f the retirinv executive, Ramon Grtiu San Martin fell dead in the street, the ijute', swart f'.inier agriculture seeretan decided to take over the office after ito previously refused. Between the time Grau San Martin sui.mitteil his resignation to a revolutionary junta and the cabinet and Hevia’s decision the utmost political confusion prevail^!, with rumors of an army rift, fears of another revclu tion, rioting and military preparations for trouble. Hevia at first said he would accept
Between Purdue and Indiana the “Old Oaken Bucket’’ has been Uie <;i>je t of mighty football struggles for generations of pigskin hetoes. Mich igan and Minnesota for nearly 3<( yens have wagoj desperate football buttles for possession of the “Little
Brown Jug.”
The history of the "Old Oaken Bucket” dates back almost a century. This mildewed receptacle, like the “Little Brown Jug,” has a distressing habit of disappearing before, between and after the annual battle. It aL ways h:i> reappeared. One of the most exciting and unu ual juants occurred after the 1930 ga ne, when Indiana sooted a surprise 7 to fl victory and was planning to use the bucket as the highlight of the
celehrat ran.
The tropi / was started s afely on its way hy Purdue official- to Indi inapolis. At Indianapolis, it was delivered to tho Indiana messenger. He gave it to a group of young men, n presenting themselves a a "eunn l
ef honor.”
1 That was the last seen of it for ome time. Bewildered Indiana and Purdue officials seatchod in vain.
Many times it has disappeared, the tesult of student intrigues, and then reappeared just as mysteriously. During one long interval when it was given up for lostli. a substitute replaced it. Then it reappeared. .Michigan has held it in its trophy room most of the time.
live figures. l-J-::-t peat savs this hasn’t happened since .Inm 7. Issti
v h‘‘n the date could It - recorded (i-7-89, and won't happen again un-
til Feb 45.
1D41. when It will he 2-3-
'Crazy? TO USE NOTHING BUT THE BEER'S OWN GAS IN BOTTLING STERLING?
the junta' offer that he head the ,
government, hut he later changed his | Finally it reappeared as mystetiously
mind, only to revert to the original 1 : R l' !, d dtsapiteared. •iecislon. The status of Grau San! 1 he original locale
Alnrtin, the while, was conjectural. Col. Fulgencio Batista, the com-
mander i f defense forces and former sergeant, had his troubles, too, id Camp Columbia, where Maj. Dahl 1 Rodriquez, Grau' military aid, wa himself arrested and held for several hours hy Batista's troops. Immediately after Hevia’s firuil decision, the cabinet resigned in a body
, ... of the moss- | rovered bit-ket was on lhc‘ old Bittner farm between Kejit and Hanover, Ind. Tradition re-ortls it that the .Morgan raiders camped near the farm during the Civil war. General Motgan an I his officers quenched t'teir thirst from the iron-bound
bucket.
The “Little Brown Jug” dates back to the curly days of Fielding Yost as
Senate Committee Denounces I’olhical Situation Alleged Fxistinur In lAiuisiana
Democratic Ticket
FOR JUDGE II I I Wl M s( IHFKI IN For Sheriff GUY h. MARTIN ( luverdale Township WALTER BRYAN Greencastle OTTO O, D41BBS Greenrastle, IndFor Joint Representative ^I'uinam and Owen (ounlie* t' IM,|AM K. TRBADW AY Spencer, Indiana.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 16. (ITD A stern denunciation of “vicious and abhorrent politic d practices” in Louisiana was conveyed to the senate today hy its special committee which investigated 1932 campaign ex pend i lures hy Senator Huey P. Long's state Denton itic organization. The committee reported that it felt itself bound “candidly and frankly to reveal to the senate the deplorable and distressing isiliticil conditionexisting in Louisiana.” Political organizations in the state, it said “piny thu political game ac cot ding to the standard that the result is the important thing and the means of obtaining it are secondary conditions.” Long frequently has referred to himself as "the Louisiana Kingfish.” Tie committee apparently agree w ith him, for it had this to say about ihe state Democratic association: “It appears that Senator Huey P Long and his lieutenants’completely controlled the affairs and policies o( that organization ... It further ap pears that this orgunizati m dom inntes and rontu Is not only tho governor of Louisiana and his policies but also directs and controls all, or
practically all, of the state departments and their employes.” The committee was instructed to inquire into tho 1932 primary campaign in which Senator Overton, n l.i :ig candid do. defeated former Setiator Broussard. Rcoussaid filed no contest of the election, but charged that his lefent was brought .dtout by fraudulent election tactics. Although it made no 'recommendations, the committee directed a vigorous attack on “dummy-candidate” tu tics, and said it found evidence of “fraud” in New Orleans resultinc from the “dummy” device. The practice, it said, “ought net to he countenanced in any free government ” Overton and Broussard were exon eratel of having had knowledge of I any “dummy candidates" having been j filed in their interests, but the committee said there was "no doubt" a majoritj- of the dummy candidates were favorable to Overton. T te committee also condemned the practict* of levying compulsory asessments u|>on office holders to raise campaign funds. Chairman Conn illy, of Texas, filed the report with Senators Logan, Detn., Ky., Thomas, Dem., Utah, Townsend, Repn., Del., and Carey,
Repn., Wyo.
If you remember we ask for contributions last week and we’ve alrwuly heard from Red, Breezy Fan and Old Timer And here’s Red back again to lay with Ihe following: Dour Net Tabs: After watchipg Balnhridge win last Saturday night I .am of the opltdon (hat Greencn-tle will have a tough time if the two teams meet In the Sectional. A Iso Mr "Breezy Fan” I think you made a mistake hy not putting Roach dale on your Big Five insteu I of FI II more. Someone said Belle Union was di - couraged over the loss of their “hot shots” and 1 are not so sure now that they will win the Sectional
“Red”.
I — fait \ the way, we almost broke nttr arm patting ourselves on the Isick ns we p'cke i eight winners irt ten high ch.sil games 1:M Frwtiy bight Tech's victory over Jeff at d Wiflnmnc’s Upset at I’em were "Ur two setbacks. Saturday evening we broke even ns we picked Purdue to beat In innn but Shertridge downed Martinsville after we ha 1 placed our confidence on the Artesian City squad. WABASH THURSDAY!
•— O—
Rl SHMLI E FRIPAT! < TovenDIr, BeinhrMge and Fillmore are entered In Ihe Wabash Valiev sectional tourney this Friday and Saturday. The finals will be nlnyed in Terre Haute next weekend,
.. But Remember.. WE WAN! ' ' J TO ENJOY AMERICA’S FINEST BEER
SPEAKING OF FIGURES EH.VBLV O (t’P) One-two-three-four No. hot a top sergeant counting step, or a dancing Instructor, but Henry 0. Peat. here, writing the second day of (he new year. Pent calculated that for the flrst time In 45 years, that date, Jan. 2., 1934. could tic written in consent
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JMSTSS!
17 So Imlhuii St.
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