The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 July 1934 — Page 3

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. MONDAY, JULY 9. 1934.

SSIFIED ADS

^B_--For Sale— 1*01; SALE: A few Poland-China p-—[=aac Hammond. Phone 80. 22? |iR SALE: Transparent apples, iheit orchards. 0-tf. yics beautiful diamond ring, |um gold, ‘A carat. Will sell Call Banner office. 9-2t SALE: Good alfalfa hay. 198-X. J. H. Pifchford. i)-lt —For Rent—

R RENT: 20 acres of good blue pasture with fine spring water. O. P. Vaughn, Greencastle, R. 9-2t

Wanted-

iNTED: T>n)ing or any kind of ^■Call .T78-Y. O-Ots ^ " tEUtN ITil •—.'0 tons scrap iron. Pay 20 Cfnt hundred delivered. GreenSalvage Co., west Walnut 7-31

TED: Any kind of dead stock. Greencastle. We pay al’ John Wachtel Co. eod

ifcj.K HELP WANTED: Man wanft<i to supply customers with famoua Watkins Products in Greencastle, fcii-mess e-tahlished, earnings aVClftg’ S25 weekly, pay starts im^tcly. Write .1. R. Watkins Co., 250-®S N. :.‘Ji street, Columbus, O. Ip

250-68 374»LX

TED: Plain sewing.

Phone 9-2p

WANTED: Small furnished home for school year. Prefer near univenity. Write information to Banner Office 6-3t

I/)St

H': White :ilk scarf he ween f’s an 1 VoncasNe Saturday Rewarth Mrs. Mary Grubb, Bstle R. 2. It. tS PLEADS FOR PEACE

tmiilminl I'ram 1’iim- Our) b<l iy. French trench soldier will ^11 v understand us if we say who play with the idea of fUri^pi.'t you dare attack us! Just to march into Germany! I world would then learn *> feel (rit of new Germany. It would no people ever yet fought irty. French people know how one one’s own soil! Every hit of [every hillock, every farmstead ^^_have to be counted with blood. M 6|U and young would dig themiinto their native soil to defend |h unparalelled fanaticism they [oppose the attempt.” ' HP* then paid a compliment—rare fromsNa7.1 lips—to the French. | don’t believe that any people disturb the peace of Germany and thereby the peace of Europe,” he Mid. ‘'We especially are unwilll*ff 4o believe it of the French |>eoP»e. "We know this people, too, longs PCS'e. Wo trench fighters remeniiter France’s population behind PEipies always regarded the war M ■ tnlaforUme for itself' and for the

ASE PLANNED ON

I \TEST I.KJFOR RULING

1

INDIANAPOLIS, July 9, (UP) A legal fes. of the ruling that spir oua Ikjuur^. can not he sold by t drink Jn Indiana was planned tod by the [Retail Beverage dketilers’ a sociatlon of America. Coopeiation of the organizati with nay group interested in clarif ing the pi#sent interpretation of ‘ law wgs voted by the nssociatioi executive •ommittee. The fight will lx- conducted und the contention Rhat ’.he present li given far more justification for t «f piiituos "beverages by t lan for draught beer, Will) general counsel for the t! said. of liquor by ifhe drink w legal in an opinion of Atl II:p Lutz, Jr., last, week, memorandum opinion of t general is sustained by t It will ho the greatest bo legger h i lia»l since adopti 18th amendment,” Roy & the facn that until oi many Iiersen.s bought alcal ty at drug stores and cr ito'i U-er taverns, leaving pi n-> way of control li Used and added: ■ our belief that, faulty as t ^^^^Blaw is, still permits t •ale OBfipiritous liquor by the dri cw that if hand hid ns it hirs lx' duringRln last 00 days it will pi mote the cause of true temperar instead of fanatical prohibition.” Royse said the association will C f due a| state wide membership dr le.veen now and the next meet!

of the state legislature in January I and will present a concrete liquor control program at tlhat time.

GENERAL STRIKE THREATENED;

FAN FRANCISCO, July 9, (UP)—j Ominous threa?s of a crippling general strike loomed in San Francisco today as President Roosevelt’s mediation board opened public hearings to determine the grievances of a maritime workers strike. The hoard’s hearings marked the first invocation of the new labor disputes act on the Pacific coast. The activities toward setitling the maritime workers’ strike involved invoking drastic powers of the labor disputes act and may serve as a test of the act’s efficiency and probably have a strong bearing on labor troubles

elsewhere.

Riot-ridden Pacific coast ports couritfed their dead at seven and injured at upward u> 300 while the million dollar a day strike entered its third month.

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF CLINTON TOWNSHIP, PUTNAM COUNTY, INDIANA Notice is hereby given that it will be necessary to make an additional appropriation of the sum of $075.00 under Special School Fund, Item No. 33, Transportation, for the purpose of purchasing a school bus body, and meet transportation costs, and insur-

ance.

The taxing officials will meet at the office of said trustee on the 17th day of July, 1934 at 8 o’clock p. m. to consider and determine such emergency and the amount necessary to meet the same. Taxpayers have a right to be heard I thereon. JAMES TABER, Trustee Clinton Township. it.

NOTICE of BIDS FOR AWARDING CONTRACTS TO SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS IN CLINTON TWP. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Trustee of Clinton Township, Putnam County, Indiana, will receive sealed bids for school bus drivers in said township for the ensuing school term. Bids will be received at the resilience of said trustee in said township up to 8 o’clock p. m. of July 17, 1934, when they will be opened, and contracts shall be awarded to school bus drivers for the ensuing school term of 8 months to the lowest and best responsible bidders. Drivers are to furnish chassis and all equipment, except body, for bus route*, and maintain the same; for automobile route the driver shall furnish and maintain all equipment. Contracts will he let for five bus routes and one automobile route; for detail information see the township trustee. Right to reject niy arvl all bids and re-advertise is reserved. JAMES TABER, Trustee Clinton Township. 2-lt NOTICE OF BIDS FOR AWARDING CONTRACTS TO SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS Notice is hereby given that Edward Chew, trustee, and advisory boanli of Washington Township, Putnam County, Indiana, will receive sealed bids for the service of school bus drivers in Washington Township, for the school year of 1934-35. Bids shall be received until 8:00 p. m. on the 17th day of July, 1934, at] office of said Trustee. Contracts shall in’ awarded to lowest or best responsible bid ler. The trustee and advisory board shall have the right to reject any and all bids. No contract shall be awarded to any ihsver unless he is twenty-one years old and a resident of Wnshingington township. liability insurance will be required on all routes. Bidcers may secure description of all routes at office of trustee. EDWARD CHEW. Trustee, Washington Township. 2-U NOTICE of PUBLIC’ SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY State of Indiana, County of Putnam, ss: In the Putnam Circuit Court April Term, 1984 Estate No. 7623 In Re: Estate of John A. Cooper, Deceased. Francis Cooper, Administrator. Notice is hereby given that the undesigned, Administrator of the estate of John A. Cooper, deceased, will offer for sale, at public auction, at the late residence of said decedent, at Putnamville, in Warren Township, in said County and State, on Monday, the 23rd day of July, 1934, the personal property of said estate, consisting of ail the hou.iehold goods, furniture, store fixtures and other articles of said decedent. Said sale to begin at 2:00 o’clock p. m. Terms of sale: Cash. Francis McClure, Aflministrator. * A. L. Evens, Auctioneer. Albert E Williams, Attorney. 25-3t!

Economic “Boss”

Vested with extraordinary powers to untangle Germany’s strained economic situation, Dr. Kurt Schmitt, Reich minister of economics, is the first figure to emerge ns a result of the altered Nazi policies to cope with the internal crisis after the recent “blood bath" purgings. SIR1KE BRING DISORDERS BRIDGETON, N. J., July 9, (UP)

— Now disorders involving about 100

sheriffs using tear gas bombs and fire hose, broke ou: today at the Seabrook farms. The strikers were driven back after I calls had been sent for reinforce- i meets from the Malaca and Hammonton barracks of the state police and from law enforcement headquarters here and at Vineland and Millville. Officers had arrested nine picker.s earlier in the day in an effort to forestall violence. Strikers hail marched and shouted on the outskirts of the property.

TEXAN GIVES MULE FULL CREDIT FOR SAVING LIFE BRECKENR1DGE, Tex. (UP)—A mule changed the destiny of D. W. McKoy. It is to that mule that (|he 67-yenr-old pioneer attributes his opportunity to live his four core years and ten. In 1871 McKoy came to Texas from Arkan ns. He obtained a job as driver on a wagon train running from Weatherford to For Griffin, through desolate anri sparsely settled country. nO rtlay one of the long-eared, saibborn animals became unusually stubborn. McKoy applied the whip, lie was reprimanded and immediately gave up his job. S^ven mont! s later the wagon t . in w: s attacked tpy Indians. It was

picke.p against 50 police and deputy : ‘ ro > e 1 311(1 tho men in

Hunt “Brains” for London Police

London is giving its “bobbies” a new deal in promotion with tho founding by Lord Trenchard, commissioner of Scotland Yard, of a police college, where officer-students are give n an intensive and thorough training before they enter active police careers. Though London’s 20,000 constables represent a tradition of over a century for competence and affability, officials wish to irt with “brains” from the beginning, and not be forced to wait for talent to rise from the ranks only after j ars of experience. Com: erionor Trenchard believes that by opening well-paid officer hips frum the outset that a high level of intelligence will be induced to enter tho police profession.

Find Parallel of Nazi ‘Terror^

Robespierre Chancellor Hitler

Quejling of the recent upri ing in Germany by Chancellor Adolf Hitler with fii in) quad- i call., the “Reign of Terror” in the French revolution of 1789. Just as tho Hitler regime, pushed to the top through violent measures, then turned to wipe out a “revolt” among its chief suppc-ters, sending them to death, Robespierre, bespectacled lawyer of southern France, back in 1789, found his own plans periled by a radical w ing and conservatives, and lashed out ferociousIf to wipe out all opposition in his rwnks with the guillotine.

Defeats “Murrayism”

E. W. Mar land

for the crop varies annually. At one ime it was worth $16 a pound, hut at tho present time it only brings $5. With joy Greene relates of /the time he shipped 10 sugar barrels full to China at *3,000 a barrel, tho sale bringing him $30,000.

TWO OF LOST TRIBE REMAIN

ST. LOUIS, (UP)—A lonely vigil is ki pt here by the last two members I of a lost tribe—that of the Wooden Indians.

Chief “Srrke Gets In Your Eye.-” and Princess “Honky Tonkyaroo” are the only two members of :his tribe here who have not joined their fathers in the happy hunting ground. The masculine survivor stands guard outside she smoke shop of Edward Mecklenberg, while the princess

adorns the front of the shop of the woman tobacconist, Mrs. Clara Heaghney. F t 78 years, since the day Meck-h-nherg’. grandfather purchased the chief, he has been luggtvl to the sidewalk w ht n the shop opened in the morning and hack inside at night—a to*a! of 28,489 round trips, if you’re interested. Once adorned with a tomahawk in on • hand and a |ieace pipe in the otrer, the chief has suffered from the ravages of time and the mischievousness of small boys. He now stands empty handed. Only once has he left hi s’nnd in those 78 years —in 1896 he w-n blown 150 feet by a cyclone. The princess has not been so lucky .b.ut being carried to shelter at night. Her feet are buried ankledeep in a block of concrete to pre"en her being carried off by an aspiring “suitor.”

'‘Assistant President Rests

Here is Congressman E. W\ Marland, who led a field of 15 candidates in the Oklahoma Democratic primary for governor and will face a runoff contest on July 24 ! with Tom Anglin, state speaker I •f the house of representatives, and protege of Gov. W. H. (Alfalfa Bill) Murray. The former oil millionaire, who has been waging a vigorous battle against “Murrayism”, led Anglin by more than 40,000 votes.

charge of it wore killed after horrible torture. “Except for th:i)ti mule I undouhteilly would have been on that death lis',” McKoy said. “I love that mule.”

GINSENG ROOT BROUGHT Rlt HES TO FARMER FRONTIER, Mich. (UP)—One acre of Michigan land and the cultivation of ginseng root, an antiidvte, used extensively by the Chinese for tlie “morning after effects,’’ has supplied L. B. Greene, 80, with a tidy livelihood for itihe past 30 years. Although the root is not a very d< .-arable commodity in tho Western Hemisphere, the ‘'yellow race” gobbles it up in a big way—three ways. The tilier Is used as a remedy for hangovers, the meaty part is used for soup, and the thirl, but last, port! n is made into medicine. During the 30 years in which he has engaged exclusively in the growing of the root he has found the demand

Donald R. Richberg, former NRA counsel, who has been styled »• “assistant president” in his post as chairman of the new industrial emergency committee, appointed by President Roosevelt to preside over industrial matters during his vacation tour to the Hawaiian islands, Is pictured with his wife and their daughter, Kloise, on the boardwalk at Atlantic City, N. J., while enjoying a short vacation from his duth-* in Washington.

Hindenburg’s Home Remains German “Capitol”

Here is President Von Hindenburg’s villa at Neudeck, East Prussia, whero the 8C-year-old former field marshal has long been aijing, and which still remains the unofficial “capitol” of Nazi Germany, even for Hitler. From it the aged soldier, surrounded by a corps of physicans, watched \ i

little interference while the house-painter chancellor and his swastika armies co-ordinated the nation. To it have flown countless Reich officials for conference, and even Dictator Hitler has been compelled to go to Neudeck for advice on various ct-to matters.

Troops Called Out as Two Die in Strike Fracas

San Francisco’s prolonged longshoremen’s walkout finally drew blood as 5,000 strikers and 1,000 police battled in waterfront streets with bombs, bullets, and clubs that resulted in the killing of two men, and wounding of scores, when strikebreakers attempted to unload freight. Above ia

shown a truck overturned in the fracas, while police kept strike pickets in order on the sidewalks. Increasing hostilities resulted in an order by acting Governor Frank F. Merriam of California, calling out 2,000 national guardsmen to protect stateowned property in tho strike-torn %i ea-