The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 July 1934 — Page 3

-For Sale-

FOI^- SAjLF-: Transparent apples. Bochheit orrh .nls. 9-tf.

' Ladies ^beautiful diamond rin^, platinum gold, 14 carat. Will sell vj cheap. Calli Banner office, 9-2t

1 ^ FOR SALK: Leghorn frying chick"i engj 26 and 30c each. Around two a I pounds. Rex Hathaway. Call K-lf,. ■ L f ':: ^ io <K: Transparent apples, lUshol. Will ileliver. Lee Phone H42-K. Ip Several [hundred started chicks reasonable' Center Point Hatchery, Cen'.er Poii ■ i 11 FOR SALK: 6-room semi-modern house for sale cheap if taken at once. Big lot. Inquire of Miss Voliva, at Hat Shop. 10-2t —For Rent,—

FOR RENT: Two or three room modern furnished apartment. Reasonable. 426 Anderson street. 10-1 p

FOR RENT: L*V acres of good blue grass pasture with fine spring water. Mrs. O, Pj Vaughn, Greeneaslle, R. R. 2, u :!t Wanted—

WAJITEI': Typing or any kind of work. Qall 37 s V. ti .'its WANTEI’ 50 tons scrap iron. Pay 20 cents hundred delivered. Greencastle Sait age Co., west Walnut street. 7-3t

WANTEP

274-LX.

Plain sewing.

"Sn,

F! '7

t H.P.I

on!

Phone

9-2p

WANTEP: Middle aged lady to assist with housework. More for home and small wages. Phone 134 between 1 and 7 evt 10-1 p MEN—Interested in making far shuve average earnings operating route ofrcigarette and penny gum machines. Exclusive territory. Small investment required. Redco Products Corp., Li Crosse, Wis. 10-31

—Miscellaneous

SeWlngimachines cleaned and ad-

justed,

lone rifio-X.

10-lp

, '/it

♦♦♦iw

mrefl .pen pij ■er of 1

licofi :ce m lave ij .*s foi ilaWej an^’l al ; | i | ?hoP I thica I

INK STATKMKNT

(s r )C

' Condition of the Fillmore of Fillmore in the State Lit the close of business on

B34.

Inking assists Discounts ?7S,i»0!>.4S r None [P ui & Securities None Je< urides Guaranteed S. Government None Bs ami y curitiea 2,112.78 Jouse <1600; Furniture jttures $500 2,000.00 al I .state Ownedi 0,‘HK) (M) pui and Balances ler Ranks 27,558.Ml! Land Cash Ittms None jrrowed None jeis None mnking As ets $117,431.07 Jkl.NG LI A HILITIKN e|s>sits— |»l $.3.3,608.78 |si‘.s, inclii' irig Time ' l>epo i"s 23,443.37 I Thrift Deposits 2,083.30 fcrn i nt and Postal 1 Deposits None bf the State all'! J Sulidivisions . . 23,387.53 |of Other Banks, Cashier’s ftified Checks .... Nope

eposits

12 to 17) .... 82,522.08 None p None

Meeurities Borrowed None Reserves for depreciation and Other liali iities None Tvtal Ranklin' l.ialolitie . $S!i,s:{ t.:!'.’

Capital Aci ount:

Capital Ste, k Total Capital

»lls ( Sj",i

ffandu Undivided Profits Net Total Capital Account .. Total Banking Liabilities And Oft] sal Account . ^ “inch!' • ai oceeds of

Debenturi' sold do Reconstruction HJMhCoi purat ien. an I $5,000 of de'^nturesi sold to local interests, which debentures are subordinated to the pgh'i arjere litors and depositors.” Included i n Loans and Discounts

are l^xm to Affiliated

Osrrfianies None Included in Other Bonds am) Securities are Shares to Affiliated

I V'W"' ' None

Includetl.in iDvposita are First Lien

t T™? 4 F um,s None

IncjuMfc>d la To’tal IH*posits are Deiposit , se«'ured by Loans and

or Invest rw-nts None

LOANS AND INVESTMENTS

M.I DGKI) to secure It C « I.TARILITIks

U. S. Bonds and Securities Other Bbnds anil Securities

Luma an,I Discount* (cxcluiling Rediscounts)

Total Pleilgesl

(excluding rediscounts)

$25,000.00 $25,000.00

2,400.00

24676

$27,646.75

$117,481.07 $12,000 of

None None None

None

i of Indiana County of Put-

State

nam set

I. A- H Hunti'r, Cashier of the Fill more Sla'' Bank of Fillmore, Indiana do solmnlv swear that the abnvf statement is true to the best of my knowhMg and belief. A. II HUNTER, Cashier Nubsrinhi d and sworn to liefore me this 7th day of July, 1934. w ■jP*’" N Hicks, Notary Public "V vo" ' is i,," Exftires Aug 22

|@ COUNTY © I® NEWS NOTES © ^ O iii ® @ ^ ^ ®

* I.T. jv ! •!•

+ + + + + CLOVERDALB Mrs. Clara Doraett •J« eje *|« .|«

Carl Church Carl Church, alias George (Slim) King, an itinerant painter, is pictured at Jefferson, Wis., where be pleaded guilty to the murder of Earl Gentry, former bodyguard of D. C. Stephenson, imprisoned Indiana Ku Klux Klan leader, and was sentenced to life imprisonment. Mrs. Carrie Gill, 58-year-old widow, who allegedly planned the murder, pleaded not guilty.

1 Monthly Payment Will take care of repairs—tires —battery—needed on your car today. * j See Us For Details L-H Chevrolet Sales Inc. Buick — Pontiac — Chevrolet

\oTiri: or Mirim i”s *\i,r or

i«r\i. rvrvrr

Hy virluo of a certlflutl copy of a df*(*re»* to up* directed from tho t.’lerk of tint rutnutn Circuit <'onrt of Putnam County, Indian;', in Causo No. 14,28wherein Citizens 'I’rust Conipany of (irooncsiatIt*. Indiana, Trustee is I'laintiff, and Klioda Hello Sinitli, Michael Smitii. Forrest Hassler, Koss KaHsler, Hoy N. Hvans, Jhtiich I-. Carry, Clarence M. Holey and Holt*y, ids wife,

are defendants, requiring; the sum of $1895.40 with

it and

t public sale to the highest bidder Saturday, .Inly 28th, 1924 hut ween the

me to make interest on

said judgment and costs, I will expose

Khe

ay, .inly 28th, 19.‘14 between the hours of ten o’clock A M and four o’clock l\ M. of said day at the south door of tin* Courthouse in the City of Creencastle. Hutnam County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not to I seven \ e 11 s, 1.11e f{»l h ’ w hi g - de scribed real estate in Hutnam Com

Indiana, to-wit:

The uortluast cjiiarter of the northquarter; and the east half of the

jarter of th

rt y i

township thirteen (Hi) north, in

anty.

quart er

2S {. qi ; all <

»f section thirty

80) in rnng;e of t he

Also, that j

cjuarter of the

i*r of the aforesaid section thirty

part

northwest

five (5) west.

'northwest quarter

quat

(80) described as follows, to-wit: He ginning at the southeast corner of the said quarter quarter section and running thence west, with the south lino of tin* said quarter quarter se. tion five (5) chains; thence north parallel to the west line of the said quarter quarter section to tin* north line of the said quarter quarter; thence east, with said Hue to the northeast corner of tin* said quarter quarter seetlon; thence south to the place of begin-

ning.

Also, ft part of the southwest quarter of seetlon nineteen (I!*) in the said township ami range aforesaid, deserihed as follows, to-wit; Heginning at the southeast corner of the said Southwest quarter of the said section nineteen (19) ami running t heriei* west to a stake in the south Hue of said quarter section that is fourteen (14) chains and sixty one (t!l) links east of tlie southwest eorner of the said quarter section; thence north, parallel to tin* west line of said section, fifteen ( I .'*) ehftlns and twelve and one-half (12 1-2) links to the center line of the highway, known as the National Hoad; thence northeastwardly with said center line of said highway, to the, east line of the said southwest quarter of the said seetlon; thence south with said line nineteen (19) chains; five (fi) links to the place of heginning J Also, that part of the said section •en (19) in tin* township and ge aforesaid, described as follows, to-wit: Heginning at the point in the

rt v t he

?nty

(5)

Hi netee

ran,

l"

center of the aforesaid highway,

known as the National Hoad, which point is sixteen ( 1 (») chains and thirt two (32) links east (measured

center line of lid highway from the west line of the said section; thence east ward! y with the center line of said highway ten (10) chains and twenty

two (22i links to a stone; thence north

two (2) degrees west to the south line of the right of way of the VandaUa

Railroad; theme south eighty (SO) de-

grees west five (5) chains and sixty

five ((>!») links; thence south seven* seven (77) degrees west fiv •bains to a stone; thence south to the

place of beginning.

Also, that part of the west half of the southwest quarter of section twenty (20) in the aforesaid township • ml range, described ns follows, beginning at the point, In the west line »f the said quarter section, which is five (5) chains and ten (10) links north of the southwest corner of the said half quarter section; thence north with said west line twenty (20) chains • Itvcn and one-half *11 1-2) links to he center of the said National Hoad; thence eastwardly, with the center of said road, twenty (20) chains and ninety-five (95) links to the east line • f the said half quarter section; thence south, with said east line, to a point in said east line which Is five (f») hains and ten (10) links north of the southeast corner of the said half quarsection; thence west to the place

ginning.

of the said above described

•>r*mlses being In Township Thirteen (13) North In range five (5) West; ind Intended to include and describe ill of the real estate owned hy the said mortgagor, and situate in the

ui id township and range.

If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will, it the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple title of said real estate, or so much thereof, as may he necessary to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale in be made without nnv rHi.-f from valuation or appraisement laws. In Witness W hereof. 1 have hereunto set my hand, this 80th day nf

lune, 1934.

AT.VA BRYAN,

Mrs. Leo Rogers and son of Chicago are spending the week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Porter Cassady. Mrs. Donas Denny and daughter Jane are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Reese at Kempton. Mr. and Mrs. Sandy Martin of Indianapolis spent the weekend here v.’ith his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis and Mrs. Coleen Irwin were in Martinsville Sunday. Mr. anil Mrs. Harry Moran spent the weekend with Mrs. Elizabeth brooks an I daughter Miss Myrtle Brooks at Indianapolis. Mi s Mary Haltom, north of town wn. a dinner jmest of Miss Syble Pottoroff Sunday. Rev. Raines of Bedford conducted -i rviv at the Church of Christ Sun-

day.

Mr. and Mrs. Rollie Hill and fnmly of Indianapolis and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Evens spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Forest Spangler at Cata-

ract.

Mrs. Kate Sandy and daughter Mrs. Nellie Martin of Indianapolis visited with Mrs. Mollie Horn last week. The Tuesday club met with Mrs. John Snyder Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Evens and family of Mayfield, Ky., are visiting relatives here. Miss Bessie Bennett and brother of Connersville called on Mr. and Mrs. Charles McAvoy last week. Mr. and Mrs. Eric Vermillion and family of Mt. Meridian and Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Hurst were in Indianapolis Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Smiley and family were dinner guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Smiley, south of town, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Clifford and family of Fairmount visited his cousin, Mrs. Nora Morrison, last Friday. George Knoy returned home last week from Hoosier Highlands because of illness. Miss Nancy Davis returned home last week after visiting her sister at Huntingshurg. Mrs. Maude Lakin, Mrs. Mildred Stone and Mrs. Lon a Larkin of Greeneaslle were in Cloverdale Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Scott of Belle Unii n were in Cloverdale last week. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wingert of Crawfordsville visi.ted Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Will Wingert. Mr. and Mrs. ClarrL Allen of Indianapolis spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. anil Mrs. Woody McKamey. Mrs. Fred Gromer is visiting for a few days at Flint, Mich. Miss Jean Clearwaterg of Indianapolis is here visiting her mother. Mr. and Mrs. Phin Runyan were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Vanderiirift. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Duncan of Martinsville called on Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Meikel Sunday a far moon. Mr. and \Jrs. Pike McAvoy and Mr. and Mrs. Charles McAvoy were at McCormick’s park Sunday afternoon. Funeral services for Mrs. Clara Sandy of Roachdale were held here Sunday morning. Mrs. Coleen Irwin left Monday morning for Dayton, O. Mr-. Salina Cunningham and Mrs. Norn Morrison and daughter Maxine called on Mr. and Mrs. James Talior Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Trippett and family of Columbus, O., spent Sunday here with his brother, Leland Tripj)ett and family. Mr. and Mrs. Harold McCammack and family of near Belle Union were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Otho Smy.'he Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Walters spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. George Douglas. Mrs. Maude Herod of Greemvistle 1- visiting relatives in Cloverdale. Miss Mable Hicks of Mt. Meridian was in Cloverdble Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Forest Spangler and family of Cataract spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Evens.

• er

of lies

All

Sheriff of Putnam County.

.l-ni

-I- •!• -I •I* CLINTON FALLS + + Mrs. Eulu Staggs + *J« *!• Funeral services for Merrill Hood were held Wednesday. Grace and Geneva Wright visited last week with Mrs. Martha Cox. The Ladies Aid met Thuirslay with Mrs. Lee Wood. Twenty menibers were present. Miss Freda Neal of Greeneaslle slant the weekend with Miss Maxine Be'itis. • Mrs, Eula Staggs spent tin* Fourth

with her sister Mrs. Cora Cunningham al Portland Mills. Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Bettis, Helen Sanders, Arvel Roach and family, Clay Betis and Willard Miller and family were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. George Pierce. Mr. and Mrs. Ward Arnold and Thomas Bettis visited Mr. and Mrs. Noah Hood at Lena Sunday after-

noon.

Mr. and Mrs. James Burk and Mr. an I Mrs. Claude Crodian spent Sunday with Beryl Ensor and family. Mr. an I Mrs. Kllrtt Ensor and daughter Barbara and Mrs. S. O. Ensor spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Mack McCartney at Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. McCartney are the parents of a new daughter, Mary Jane. Mrs. Goldie Bee and Mrs. Eula Stagg- spent Sunday afternoon with

Mrs. Ora Thomas.

Mr. and Mrs. Ward Arnold and I ed because he witno led the shooting children and Mrs. George Humphrey | am] recognized Ibo ailants, inves-

;.nd son spent last Friday with Arvel tigetors theorized.

Roach and family. , At , east two m „ n Pntered the sa . Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Hall of Bra ^ ) ,on while their companions remained

, I O si,, •« 1, ♦ r. t»I ..’a!

2 Beer Tavern Employes Slain GANGLAND SLAVING SEEN IN SHOOTING FRAY AT GARY

ROADHOUSE

GARY, In]., July 10, (UP)—Four suspects were questioned today ns police Investigated the gangland slaying of two employes in a saloon operated by Mis. Eva Rapaich. The slaying* were the result of mistaken identity on the part of the

bootleggers, police believe.

Mick Vujk h, 45, bartender and former figure iti d'.c ah ihol racket here, wa- one of the two men killed. The • ther, Iso Gnlovich, janitor, was kill

ed because he witno ed

SWITCHING OF LOCKS EMBARRASSED CHURCH\tBN i SWHDKSBORO, Pa- . (UP)—Lock-1 switching on the portals of the Union A. M. fi Church hac‘ embarrassing results for two former trustees of the 1 chuirch. Two new trusties, elected recently,' put new locks on the doors ami removed the old ones in order to have

cutmiplete control of the siutation. Marshal W. Jordan, 69, and Oiarles Wesley, 73, laith colored, lost in the trustee elections- Resenting this, they removed the new locks and replaced the old ones. Arrested on a disorderly conduct chaige, each one was thrown for a $5 loss for lock-switching-

I! INNER WANT ADS PAY

Mrs. Roosevelt In Chicago

zil spent Sunday with .1

family.

Mr. and Mrs. Ellett En«o r l av been visiting Mr. and Mrs, S. (>. En

sor.

hri Hall and in a par outside. The victims were

i i Idled with bullets without warning. Among the su pect arrested were J: soph Rollo, owner of the Tasmo Gardens, near South Rend, and his

Mr. and Mrs. Abner Sigler visited j partner, Dominic Raliofiore, 30. Two Mr. and Mrs. Tom White at Barnard friends of Rollo also were held. Their Sunday. names were not revealed. Mrs. Merrill Hood and children of One theory advanced hy police wa Greeneaslle called on Mrs. George | that the bartender was shot by gang-

Pierce Sunday afternoon.

I* •!• -I- -p a. a. > PLEASANT GARDENS + Leota Showalter •) F + •!• -1- 4, 4 Mr. and Mrs. William Allen returned home Sun<l.a\ after spending a week in Chicago and Michigan. Edward Chew and family spent Tuer lay with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Senter at Brazil. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Cromwell of Terre Haute and Mr. and Mrs. Pat Cromwell of Brazil spent the Fourth with Mrs. Florence Lee. Mrs. Della Cr'oks of Bridgeton visited Leota Showalter Saturday. Mr. an*l Mrs. Bt Hie ’Pucker an i son spent Sunday with Dan Hassler, near Poland. Mrs. Sam Schem-k and daughter Eva of Indianapolis spent Saturday tight at Mort Smith’s. Rev. Ashby of Whiting spent Saturday night and Sunday with Asbury

Poe.

Mrs. Flonnie Lee was in Terre Haute Saturday. F •!• -r -r r F + F NEW M VYSY’ll.LE + By Miss Helen Weller F F F F F F F F F Mr. and Mrs. Hob Davi. and fa.ni•ly of Indianapolis and Mrs. Mrs. Dewey Morpliew of Danville spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. John Malicoat and family. Mr. and Mr . George Stringer •pent Sunday with Mr. an. I Mrs. Jess Kendell. Mrs. Kendell is very ill. Ida ami I .aura Steward spent Thursday afternoon with Mi Alma Weller and daughter. Ella Eggen called on friend in New Maysville Monday afternoon. Imogene Beam spent Sunday afternoon with Lyn Kendell. Mrs. Sarah Weekly retumel home Friday from Indianapolis where she 'isited her sister, Mrs. Etta Underwor. 1. Paul Beam of Indianapolis spent he weekend with his parents, Mr. ml Mrs. Walter .Beam.

steis who believed he was Rollo. The other man probably was killed to

silence him.

!• *!• *[• *1* + -T- *j. *1* F PORTLAND MILLS F '* By L.ona Calvert F F F F F F + F F Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Alexander of Morton are the parents of a daughter Mitsey Ann. Mrs. Alexander was formerly Miss Mildred Firestone, Mr, and Mrs. Ed Ensor and 'daughter spent Sunday in Indianapolis. Mrs. W. C. Martin entertained several friends Thursday in honor of Mary Evelyn’s eleventh birthday anniversary. Refreshments were served.

LAW PROFESSION TERMED ONE OF SEKIVCE TO PUBLIC KANSAS CITY, Mo., (UP)— The young man who enters the low practice should i:|o so with the purpose of giving service ra her than making money, according to Earl W. Evans, president of the American Bar Association. The law profession now has 175,000 members and is overcrowded with men who entered “just to make money.” The time has come, however, when those in tube field for mercenary purposes find it not, so profitable, Evans Irelieves. “If the young lawyer’s uppermost thought is to make money, he would fare he ter in some other field. The legal profession was horn in the tradition of serving the individual lawyer's day and generation, and it mu-t not be classed as a money making vocation. “Service should he the dominant ilea in the lawyer’s mind. Those who start out to make money, usually are the ones who are unsuccessful in accomplishing their purpose.”

MORION WINS. 7-6 Morton nosed out Russellville, 7-6 iu a semi-pro baseball game at Mutton Sunday afterno n. The contest was an interesting affair and went 11 innings before the outcome was definitely settled.

Mrs. Franklin I). Roosevelt, in Chicago to see th< World’s Fair, as a “private citizen,” shown as she made a hri'-f broadcast. Mrs. Roosevelt arrived with frien"s in a small coupe. She was unescorted by police or secret service men.

Radio Looms as New Agent for Propaganda

Looming greater and greater as a powerful ag. nt for dissemination of propaganda among the nations of the world is the short wave radio, which has been used effectively by Russia, especially in broadcasting speeches of Dictator Josef Stalin and May Day celebrations in Red Square at Moscow, by Gr«'nt Britain and Germanv. The most recent in-

stance of its use was the broadcast of Dr. Joseph Goebbcls, Nazi minister of propaganda, after Ger* many’s “Bloody Saturday” The creation of the new federal communications commission, headed by Eugene 0 Sykes, puts the United States into a powerful position for the dissemination of propaMflda.

A new and powerful agent for lisfemination of propaganda is finding its way int > the home. It is the short wave radio. Great Britain saw it coming, and was first to exploit its power. Russia saw it and erected what is believed to he the world’s most powerful station. Germany aw it and furnished one of the most recent instances of its efficacy when Chancellor Hitler’s minister of propaganda, Dr. Joseph Gobbels, stepped to the microphone after the “bloody Saturday” and warned the German people- and the world—that more “heads shall roll” if a further revolt against Nazi supremacy ever is started. That the Roosevelt administration realizes the power of radio’s voire can no longer he 'doubted. The president- asked congress for full speed in passing a hill for federal control of all wireless communication. On the same day that Goebbels roared his threat across Germany’s living rooms, President Roosevelt’s appointment of Eugene O. Sykes, of Mississippi, as chairman for seven years of the new communications commission, was announced. The international nature of the short wave device was illustrated hy Goebbels’ address which was relayed to American, British and Argentine

stations. Itrit'sh engineers were first to develop short wave transmission to its new and powerful status. There w-as a necessity of reaching the outermost frontier.s rf far-flung Great Britain. Short wave solved the problem of finding a qur-k means of communication that also was effective. The British -eem t'> have started what promises to become a battle all over Europe for radio supremacy. Russia has just complete 1 at Moscow what is said to he the most powerful .-tation in the world, not even excepting WLW at Cincinnati with its 500 000 watts. France, Germany and other countries have subsidized the powerful stations for the government. Short wave clubs are springing up throughout the United States. The first of these sets was built for the purpose of tuning in on police broadcasts, such as "Squad car No. 86— man killed in n bbery at a gasoline station at Umpty-ump street’’ or a fire, a kidnaping or “hoys letting the air out of tires in front of the Bijou theater.” The thrill of tuning in on sporting events in England or Australia or getting music from Cuba or South American countries helped the growth of sh irt wave until today 60

to 70 per cent of all radios sold have the short wave dial. Members of an international short wave dub converse with one another over thousands of miles. Short wave sets all over America are picking up uch doings abroad as May day cele« hratiens in Rtvl Square, Moscow— featured by Stalin’s speech and the revolutionary activities in Cuba. Short wave made possible, in fact, the quickness with which governments changed hands in Havana. After one of the recent Cuban revolutions, a network of broadcasting stations which covered the country was revealed. Through these stations •he flame of revolt was fanned to the point where it swept the ruling regime out of power. Under Chancellor Hitler, development has reached a high point. Four new stations have l>een erected in suburbs of Berlin and on these the Short Wave 'Broadcasting company sponsors 21 hour programs timed to reach the United States, Japan, Mexico, Si uth America and China during evening hours when the greatest number of listeners can be reached. To what volume short wave propagan la attains in the United States rests largely with the powers that he in Washington (through the new ■ unn in at i' > - nmi i ji.