The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 July 1934 — Page 3

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE. INDIANA. MONDAY, JULY 30. 1934.

SSIFIED ADS

-For Sale-—

f:\LE: Transparent orchards.

apples.

9-tf.

SALE—Large for office or

Kug and davenport Berry street

ream Social at Maple Chapel 'Tuesday evening, July 31.

28-2ts.

ir.O FUNMAKERS

WITH HUGE ( lUCUS

Ringling Bros, and Bamum & Bailey Combined Circus, truly The Greasiest Show on Earth, making its grand and 1 glorious 1934 tour of the

book case (!<mtinent ' 8n(1 definitely scheduled to home only ! exhiljit in Indianapolis, Tuesday, July ’ 31, has assembled from the four cor-

ners of the earth—and

table. 30-Ip

SALE:—4 burner Florence V oil stove, high shelf, $<>.. r >0. oven $ L0«. Furniture FaKast Side Square. Phone

30-It.

SALE:—Cucumbers, 40 cents jreti, delivered. Ralph Minter, He, R. R- 2. dO dp

For Rent—

points in be-

tween—the greatest aggregation of clowns in all amusemen: history. One hundred and fifty intemation-ally-famous funmakers cavort and caper about the seven rings and stages and the huge hippodrome track this year in the most stupendous circus

presentation ever offered.

Clowns have always been an important part of the circus and the amusement world was amazed anti delighted when an even hundred of them by Ringling Bros, and Bamum & Bailey. Bu. when UiO of the funniest clowns imaginable were placed on the same, program in a simultaneous display this spring, the enthusiasm of circus-goers gnew no bounds. The big show, however, has a jealously guarded reputation for doing the new and unheard-of anti there i -

its gi-

gantic new performances this season. Besides the clowns, there are 800 men. and women arenic stars of international eminence, many of them touring the American con'inrnt for

the first time.

Several of the producing clowns have introduced splendid ideas into

supply customers with fa- ^ y ear ' a a11 new ^11 y u"' .. i„ n,™nJ krged opening spectacle. The Durbar

of Delhi in which more than 2,000 people and aimals take pa:t- The Ituibar heads a list of features newly a .‘'cmbled that will compel the vast

iTMEN'T FOR RENT: — Mil furnished! or unfurnished, leminary and College. J. P.

30-2t.

RENT: One, one-half story)

house, modern, Available J evklence of th , lp ^^ughout

j, c. C. Ckiutier. 28-3ts. 'RENT:—Four room semihalf of coubla. Call at 012 sll, g, or Phone , r >81-L. 2(-3t.

—Wanted—

HELP WANTED: — Man

tkins Products in Green ness established, earnings j $2.0 weekly, pay starts im- |\ Write J. R. Watkins Co., :,th treet, Columbus, Ohio.

30-Ip.

j3;i): Home woman with two nr a day free can make exJey taking care of our trade m-keepers. No investment rente The Abner Royce Co., Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio. 28-30-2p. ED: Any kind of dead stock. Greencastle. We pay al' John Wachtel Co. eod

ED TO TRADE — Modem iiome adjoining state park in Jaunty for Greencastle propYie 879. 25-28-30-3p Miscellaneous—

1934 prograb to he recalled with d&ep pleasure for a lifetime. 1 Among them is a great new congress of the world’s foremost acrobatic champion lea|iers and somersaulters presented together in the most amazing athletic contest ever witnessed and a series of thrilling innovations including a startling new sensation presented by the Grea* Hugo. The great combined circus will arrive on four long trains of 100 double-length steel railroad cars, bringing over 1,000 people, f>0 elephants, 1,009 menagerie animals and 700 horses.

(^Markets’

Scholarships Are Awarded

TRESSIK STEELE \NT) HELEN B MN WIN YEAR’S TUITION

TO I. U.

In uana university scholarships for the 1934-35 school year have been warded to Tressie Steele and. Helen

Bain, graduates of

Barrage Of “Invisible Smoke” Will Doom Airplanes as Weapons Of Invasion In War

1 when an expert engaged in the experiments abroad arivenl in London. Even now before the system has

LONDON, July 30.—Airplanes as weapons for the means of invasion have been made useless by the invention of invisible smoke, according to

a I.ondon newspaper.

The new and deadly defensive weapon, the existence of which was revealed for the first time by the London Daily Herald, ran stop airplane

l»e “hung" in the sky as

Bainbridge high enf?ines can

school, according to announcement | a harraffe aga inst invaders, and is

made Satur ay by Roy K. Jones, ’

been completed, the expert explained, the experimenters can rely on bringing down seven out of nine airplanes tryig to fly through the invisible

barrage.

The system consists of the “spraying'' of certain areas of the sky with “smoke" particles of solid substance which, when they are “breathed in” by the airplane’s petrol motors, re-

| mree xoreign nations. I ,

Both were ^elected from a field of t. ^ . 'suits in complete and permanent en-

, 7 . .1 So far have the foreign nation* , .,

applicants on the basis of | f • .. , gme failure. , , perfected the new invention that dur-1 , . , ,-i c- j Ralph Sands, also of * . • , . , , . The substance can he easily fired.

.. . , ,. , . , ing recent trials a whole squadron of . , r i, . i Bainbridge high school, was chosen • , A battery of guns is able to drench alternate. He will be gven a scholar-] 111 <ra l>ri1 ' , ' 1 ,ini ’ rough a particular section of sky area with ship in event either of the two girls '' M „'. ine ‘V UrP ’ sufficient “invisible smoke" shells to chosen are unable to attend the state I P f xls * Pnt< * * ,u ^ sm “ke ] eavp ;in impenetrable barrier.

I was made known to the Daily Herald I ^ || ( ||) ^ tiired to

county superin’.rniitnt of schools.

being experimented three foreign nations.

with by |

eight

scholarship.

and liberate their cargo of paralyzing vapor at any height required. If sucked into the carburation system of the plane engine, the gas will cause a choke in the feed system to the cylinders. Every country interested in the “invisible smoke” is guarding the plans and formula more carefully than any other secret it possesses, for in the event of war, this new method might revolutionise all accepted tactics. Secret experiments, the Daily Herald assert*, are being undertaken by British chemists and engineers to find a counter-agent to the new defense system.

school.

Accor ling to Superintendent Jones the scholarships pay tuition fees to the state school amounting to about

$80 for the year.

Prison Break Is Studied By (!ov

I NT FORM OF ONE OF FIVE KS-

CAI’KS FOUND WEST OF

INDIAN Al’ol.lS

As Gulf Hurricane Left Six Dead

sells seat covers. 27-8l I SALE Enamel range, A l $19.75. Extra good rocker, “ffries, Berry street. Ip OPENS EIGHT VI EDITORS’ PARLEY ,N A BOLLS, July 30—Indiana will launch their camthe November election at jnl Summer meeting of the lv ulilican Editorial AssociaWa/wa:.ee August 17 to 'for the mfH’t/ig were ant ay by Harry W- Thompi eii of the association, r Arthur R. Robinson, eann re-election, will make the speech of his campaign at 1 banquet Saturday night. pening session, Frederick f I ogansport, second district for representative in Conjll -peak. State candidates Introduced. No business sesphinned during the meeting. F OF MlMINTS I RATION r 7fi41. isherehy given that the unha Wn appointed by the the Circuit Court of Futility, State of Indiana, Ador of the estate of Margaret |atc of Putnam County, dentate i s sup|iosed to he solCox. Administrator.

1934.

Thomas, Attorney. Herod, Clerk of the Puteuit Court. 3«-3t. ! OF ADMINISTRATION is hereby given that the led has lieen appointed by of the Circuit Court of County, State of Indiana, of the will of Fred Hixnn, utnam County, deceased. • tate is supposed to he solixon. Executrix.

1934.

D's, Gillen Jt Lyon.

7636.

Herod, Clerk of the Put- ' "uit. • 16-3t

Leaving in its wake six dead, and property and crop damages mounting into millions, a gulf hurricane swept over a 123-milo sector in southern Texas. Scenes from the devastated coastal area at Port Lavaca, shown top, n garage crushed by tho wind’s fury; bottom,

part of the wrecked waterfront.

Plans Half-Mile Drop Into Sea

Dr. William Beeb*

No.

«>F administration i hereby given that the unhas been appointed by the the Circuit Court of Putnam Rite of Indiana, Administraestate of Albert Grissom jTnam County, deceased. Jtate is supposed to be solDalby, Administrator. 1934. 1' red V. Thomas. Herod,, Clerk of the Putit Court. 7 «L 16 3t.

r

IN'DI WAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Hogs, 0,300. Holdovers, 489. Generally steady. 100-190 lbs., $1.60-$ 1.73; 190-210 lbs., $ 1.80-$ 1.85; 210-275 lbs., $4.90-S4.95. T :p $.3. 27.3 lbs. up, $4.70$4.85; 140-160 lb*., $3.50-$3.75: 120MO lbs., $2.7.3 $;. 15; 100-120 lbs., $2.2.3-$2.40. Packing sows, $3.50-

$3.25.

Ca'.tle, 1,400. Calves, 500. Run in herds 20 or more loads of beef steers. Early trade limited to lower grades, | $5.50-$7.40. Steady to shade lower. Several loads held at $8.00. She stock around steady. Load of heifers, $6.25.

Bulk under $6.00. Cows $1.75-12.50.1 - Cutters and low nit ers, 75 cents to I INDIANAPOLIS, July 30 (UP)— $1.75. Vealer , steady, $5.00 down. i ^ prison uniform believed abandoned She'p 00 limbs steady. Ewes and ; , n ,. 0 f five convicts who escaped, wethers, $0.2 > $o.50. Bucks $1.00 less.'fpoiy, Hie state prison last week was Throwouts, $4.00-$1.25; slaughter found in some hushes near a farm on 1 sheep quotable at $1.00 $2.50. j the Rockville road west of here, it i — close today.

] City police took charge of the unij form hut refused to discuss the mat-

I ter.

The escaped prisoners are Maurice ! O’Flaherty, William Jay, Joe Burj nett, Kenneth Rogers and Ixiuis (’rail, I all of whom were serving terms for

robbery.

MICHIGAN (TTY, In , July 30I Wayne Coy, under-secretary to Governor Paul V- McNutt, conferred here Sunday with officials of the Indiana : state prison, where five convicts escaped early Saturday. Coy, who has chaigc of penal afj fairs for the state’s chief executive, said lie planned* no formal investigaI lion. However, he spent considerable time in talking to Warden Louis I Kunkel and other prison heads. 1 No trace of the five escaped men I had been found today. | The prisoners involved in the break | were Maurice O’,Flaherty, 25 years old, believed to lx- the leader, who was sentenced to 2u years for bank I robbery; William ( Jay, 45, also j serving 20 years for robbery; Joe Humott, 27, sent'lie d to 10 years of burglaiy; Kenneth Rogers, 22, and Louis (’rail, 19, each serving 10 to 15

I years for robbery.

j O’Flaherty had previously been confined in Indiana and Ohio jails and was hid I for nine months in St. Louis in connection with ihe murder of a I policeman, Jay servedi terms in Jefi ferson City, Mo., and at Joliet, III. Burnett is wanted in Colorado as an I e.si utped convict and Grail solved a re-

formatory sentence.

I Craftiness more than daring was used by the men ta c ffect their eseape which iwas in con l ist to the prison break of last Sipti" lier when 10 convicts shat their way to freedom. Three of the prisoners were hospital patients and the other two weie trusties. Investigation revealed that during the night the men crawledthrough a door leading 1 to a new hospital wing- The b>, k on the door apparently had been tamiiered with prior to the break. From there the quintet made its pi rilous way over slanting slate roof- md across the 18-

foi.t prison wall.

) Once outsi le, the fugitives stole an I nutorrobi'e from a nearby private

1 garage and f.ped a\ I was some time later

| discovered that tinFollowing an inv. i Kunkel discharged

j night captain of tin

j E. Netzel, another guard. They we:e ' accused of gros.- negligence. The i guards were appointed in 1926 I 1929, respectively'. Harry Parker, ] named in 199, wn- suspended for 10

days.

Thirty-five prisoners have escape from the Michigan City prison since Kunkel was appoint'd by Governor i’aul V. McNutt.

The

THIS WEEK’S WEATHER

Generally fair, except shavers about Thursilay. Temperature near normal first part of week; warmer

explode! middle; cooler by Friday.

-

■ y to freedom- It liefore the guards men had escaped, tigation, Warden A’- c. Griswold, guards, and W.

• 1

t'J

Ik

• ^ .

To Dr. William Beebe, world-famous zoologist, has come the unique honor of being the only man in history who has descended 2200 feet Into the sea and lived to recount his adventure. Housed in his two-and-onc-half-ton steel bathysphere, equipped with oxygen, telephone and guide lines, moving picture camera and electric lights, the scientist will again drop into tho depths near Nonesuch island off tho Bermuda least This time he plans to lower himself more than half a mile tq view marine life' never before seen by ffisn. o

NOTICE OE ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has lx en appointed by the Clerk ■ f the Circuit Court of Putnam. County, State of In iana, Executor of the will of Anna D. Gilmore late of Putnam County, deceased. Said (.-ti e i ’upposed to be solvent. The Central Tiust Company (Ireencnstle, Indiana, Executor. Jply 30, 1934. .Frank G. Sto< •!, Attorney. No. J642. John W. Hero . Clerk of flu* Putnam Circuit Court. 30-3t.

Focal Point of Civil Warfare in Austria

This photo shows the onee-pcaccful city of Graz, Austria, capital of the province of Styria, which has been the scene of fi ice fighting between government troop and Nazi for us in the civil warfare

resulting from the Nazi putsch and the assassination of Chancellor Dollfuss. In one skirmish, 180 persons were killed in Graz. Casualtic# >u other sections are reported heavy.

Minneapolis Learns Severity of Martial Law

How strict military rule can be under martial law is being learned by residents of Minneapolis which has been placed in control of troops ns a result ®f the truck drivers’ strike. For one thing, before

any food trucks could be driven, military permits had to be obtained, and this photo shows tho long lines of applicants for truck driving permit , while soldiers stand by prepared for any emergency.

Radio Photo Depicts Drama in Austrian Clash

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A Heimwchr trooper, wounded in one of the numerals clashes betiA'en government troops and ^x’azis, in Vienna, is shown being half-carried, halfdragged by his comrades La this dramatic picture,

telephotoed to London from Vienna, and then radioed to the United States. More than 3,000 have been killed and wounded in the Au-Uian conflict. •