The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 June 1936 — Page 4
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENOASTLE, INDIANA FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1936.
polis visited Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Priest over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Etcheson and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Michaels motored to Paris, 111.. Sunday. Miss Francis Case of Greencastle spent Sunday with Mrs. Mattie Wilkinson. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Miller and children of Mattoon, 111., spent last week with Mrs. Miller’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Deweest. Bruce Lane. Mr. and Mrs. William Sumerville. Omcr Akers. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Crodian and son and Mrs. Maggie Hall attended the dedication services at Vincennes Sunday. Dolby Codings attended the Democratic convention at Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. H. Shepperd of Chicago are visiting the latter’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Shuey. Neal Crider of Indianapolis visited I his sister. Mrs. John Obenchain Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Eugene Hector of Chicago is I a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ford. The Eastern Star held memorial [services in their chapter room MonJ day night. BALKANS IM NH RKAKMINd; TROOPS RISE TO MILLION
Special For Saturday
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Little Powers Between Swiss Frontier, Black and Aegean Seas Twice as Formidable as During Mar
diers.
If all the countries lying between the Swiss frontiers and the Black
A million trained and Ae S ean scas wore summoned to
instantaneous mobilization, at least a million men would answer he call, fully trained, fully equipped, and backed by material rushed from the munition plants which would make them more formidable than twice their numbers who fought in the
world war
The most redoubtable fighting entity in southeastern Europe is without question. Yugoslavia. Born from the tiny twin states of Serbia and Montenegro, whose ill-equipped and meager forces were mowed down in the first days of the world war. the kingdom over which the 11-ycar-old
Miss Vivian Peffley visited with Miss Rowena South last week. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Hostetler of Roachdale and daughter Mary of Indianapolis visited Mr. and Mrs. James Allen Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Codings and son were guests of i datives at Goshen over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Beck and son, and Churchill Allen were guests at
a birthday dinner
Clarence Beck, on Sunday, in honor of the anniversaries of their daughter Marjorie Ann Beck, and also Carl
Beck.
Miss Margaret Reed of Indianapolis spent Saturday evening with
Mr and Mrs. H. G. James.
Rev. Sparks, pastor of the Christian church, was a guest of Mr. and
Mrs. James Lewman Sunday.
Mrs. F. C. Collins spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Rein at Dan-
ville.
Paul Collett and family of Indiana-
VIENNA 'UP»
to the minute soldiery, armed with the most modern implements of war, are marking time in the Danubian and Balkan countries in readiness for the sudden surprise which may her-
ald a great holocaust.
Austria has revealed apprehensions by rushing through a general con- I scription plan. Inspired by Hitler’s example, the government also is eager to raise its puny army of .’18,000 men to a size in keeping with the task which this country of maintaining the peace in the cockpit of
| Europe.
In due course, Austria will add
some thousands of youthful recruits monarch. Peter, reigns, has 14.000.to its armed forces. The time may 000 people from which the governcome when it will have about 150.- ment could pick half a million sturdy 000 well-trained soldiery or gendar- fighters within a few weeks,
at the home of j rnerie, but even so the strength in Compared with a few thousand
the field will be small compared with hardy mountaineers who formed the the powerful armies which some of Serb and Montenegrin armies before Austria’s neighbors, like Yugoslavia, the war. Belgrade has a “cadre” Czechoslovakia, on the one hand, and army of more than 100.000 men alItaly and Germany, on the other, ways on the watch, to the west could rush into action against Italy, to the north against In comparison with the gray Hungary (which yearns for the tcrhordes of the Austro-Hungarian em- ritory it lost to Yugoslavia) and to pile, Austria’s present day military the east against Bulgaria, might is only a phantom. At the In full fighting trim, Yugoslavia pinnacle of its strength, the emper- probably could muster alone a milor's army which flung itself with lion men. backed up with 1.000 up to Germany into the world war totalled date fighting and bombing planes, nearly 10,000.000. while Berlin com- either of French or German manumanded at one time 12.000.000 sol- facture. At present Yugoslavia pos-
formidable air force of 700
A
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planes and 10.000 officers and men. Austria and Yugoslavia combined have a standing army which reaches almost 150,000 men. while if Hungary’s forces were added the 200.000 mark would be reached. Technically. Hungary's forces must not exceed .15.000 men. but with the gendarmerie and armed police it has considerably more than that number in training. Rumania would bring the total of the standing armies in southeastern Europe well above the half-million mark. With a population of nearly 19,000.000 of various races. King Carol commands more than a quarter of a million regulars, while he has a small navy and an ever increasing air force. In time of war. Rumania probably could put 1.000 w'arplanes into ac-
tion.
Like Austria and Hungary, Bulgaria has been kept to a skeleton army under the peace treaties, now mouldering to dust under the heels of reborn militarism. It is expected, however, that King Boris’ government will bring the anned forces up to sufficient strength to ensure the safety of the nation. The treaty strength is only 20.000 men. but it is believed there are thousands of sufficiently well trained men to enable an army of at least a quarter of a million being formed at the first call. mbd.ce2il- u ACBkt. etaotn ctaoinnu Turkey. Albania and Greece among them have sufficient forces to bring the total of standing armies in southeastern Europe to about 1,000.000
men.
Except for countries like Rumania. Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia, which were victorious in the war, the air strength of the nations along the Danube is meager in the extreme. Austria has virtually no military aviation. Neither has Bulgaria nor Hungary. But if the war calls comes, all these nations can muster within a few weeks millions of men. while the military equipment of Yugoslavia Rumania and Czechoslovakia is second only to Dial of the big powers which have supplied most of th« guns, bombs, tanks and airplanes. BONES DISCLOSE ANCIENT INDIAN MULTIPLE BIRTH HARRISBURG. Pa., (UP) — Discovery of the birth of Indian twins 15 centuries ago is as important an event to Pennsylvania archeologists
as the birth of the Dionne quintuplets was to the world. Skeletons of the infant aborigine twins, uncovered recently by WPA workers in an ancient burial ground near Somerfield, Pa., are believed to be the first of their kind in the United States. Unearthing of the twins born among the Indian tribes which roamed what is now Somerset county opens a new chapter in archeological research. Dr. Donald A. Cadzow, state archeologist. who made positive identifi-
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cation of the skeletons, pointed out that while multiple births among the
find the remains of Indian twj , that period is “without precede!
Indians 1,500 years ago were rare, to '• archeological work.”
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