The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 May 1937 — Page 4
CHE DAILY BANNER, G KEEN CAST iuE, INDIANA TUESDAY, MAY i, 1937.
CHATEAU Last Tunes Tonight ASTROLOGER JOE A Sky Full Of Laughs WHtKJ yui/R /z >1 BIRTHDAY?' C , v Pt'tittd «rO T’.ccwtt Tnc Msn < aliin Kids and ('aiiK-ru Thrills. Wednesday and Thursday HERE'S A DANDY!
Former Simpson Home Museum
TWO WISE MAIDS . HOP! MANNING DOMIOCOOR f IACK!( ,IWil IIIMH 1UIS MBIRR IMteMSlt! [wt mraKfiiw
M i s Sl id < TKI) SHOUTS
Bilbao
potatoes; 281.!K!3 pounds of onions; forces to spur them on to .'MS.I'm pounds of sweet corn; 181, ter British and French authorith a 963 pounds of parsnips; 199 201 said they would evacuate the non„f can.as :;.-)2.889 i>ounds of combattants despite his displeasure.
Capitalizing on the publicity stirred by the romance of Mrs Wallis Simpson and the Duke of Windsor, a Baltimore party purchased the childhood home of Mrs. Simpson, restored it, and opened it to the public as a museum at an admission charge of 50 cents per person.
STATE I.AUtiK BAM) OWM.K sentatives did pledu.- fullest coop. •
(.HUM \ N OI'FK TAI.S TOM) TO TUI MAM'AI. LAROK
BERLIN, May 4
INDIANAPOLIS, May 1 Never fully alert to the futt that she is one of the most extensive farmland owners in the middlewest, the State of Indiana today had mapped a program for central management of
up, p r opa* stal0 institutional farms which ought
ganda Minister Paul Joseph Gocbbels, to lcad her into the fratcrnit y Jt
firebrand of the Nazi movement, M aster baimers.
Monday ordered every high official in At Purdue university, today, farm his department to spend two months managers from twenty state institu this Summer at manual labor. tions met in their second monthly “Those who want to lead the pco- conference since supervision of state pie,’ he sail, “must nevei forget how owned farms had been given to J. 1J. a man of tile people feels.” Hull, of Columbus, by Thurman A The order applied also to film and Gottschalk, state administrator of radio authorities in his ministry. Fur- public welfare and general supervisteen men will start work May 5 in or of institutions. They accepted in textile factories, coal mines, book full the generous offers of professshops and on farms. Otners will work ors and field agents in the Purdue on roads and coal stokers. 'school of agriculture to render ad-
visory and consultant services regarding crop rotation, soil conservation, planting and harvesting. While the university did not offer the coveted Master Farmer award to the managers of the state farms, repr?-
all good children
remember
^Mothers J)au
ation in the new program to intro duce scientific and efficient meth ods in state operation of farms. An inventory reported at the meeting by Mr. Hull gave the fajt that the State of Indiana is the overseer of 15,530.75 acres of farm land, of which 1600 acres are timber land; 2 618 are pasture; 1.170 are garden; 8.349 are in grain ancl_ legumes, and 66. 1 ) acres are in or-
chards.
On those lands last year, Indiana produced 23.340 bushels of wheat. 6i,094 bushels of corn; 11,290 bush-
els of oats: 11.400 pounds of tobac- : ish liner Habana last night even co; 687.776 pounds of pork; 100,456 the big guns l>oomcd on the batth pounds of lard; 138.529 pounds if lines outside the city, beef; 5.163 tons of fodder; 28.707 1 Hundreds were reported killed on pounds of veal; 157 609 dozen eggs; ; both sides as the Nationalists seem615,086 gallons of milk and 101,209 ed to be making a supreme effort to head of poultry. push to Bilbao before evacuation of Not only that Indiana fed most of the non-combattants permitted Bas the inmates of her institutions and que authorities to convert their caphelped with the feeding of the poor ital into a fortress like Madrid, from the pro dm e of her gardens Gen. Francisco Franco, Nationalwhich yielded 1.313,884 pounds of ist leader, was reported to have takcabbage; 1 864,648 pounds of Irish en personal charge of the insurgent
pounds
sweet potatoes; 195,817 pounds of spinach and kah ; 298.988 pounds of turnips; 20 tons of sugar beets and 1,257,745 pounds of tomatoes. These and many tons of other food stuffs were canned and used by the institutions through the winter. LOYALISTS HOLD BILBAO BILBAO, Spain, May 4. lUP)— Encouraged by victories against insurgents pressing on Bilbao, Basque authorities today postponed the evacuation of 2 ;;00 children until tomorrow to permit 1,000 more refugees to embark on the Spanish liner Habana for southern France. The French and British consuls each offered two additional merchant ships to issist in evacuation of some of tii 300,000 civilian men women and children trapped in beleaguered Bill »;i'i The Spanish rebel blockade was disregarded by the British and French who w nt ahead with plans to remove nomombaHants in the northern Span h port duspite insurgent objection and refusal to guarantee safe conduct of refugee ships outside territonal waters. Tlie delay in evacuation plans followed Loyalist government victories, the Basques fi icing back rebel General Emilio M a’.- invading Natio ialist troops at several points. Survivors of the Italian “Black Arrow” briga ; traped at Bermeo, where many were reported to have been driven into the sea, fought desperately to extricate themselves from an increasingly grave posifion army reports said. At the other end of the line, Loy alist troops rep i ted repulsing Nationalist contingents at Higiotia and Guernica. The battle, which raged all through the n - lit and continued on today, covere d j'reparations to evacuate 30,000 of Bilbao's 300.000 homeless refugees. The first con tingent of 3,800 boarded the Span
a?
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Franco and Gen. Emilio Mola, commander of the Bilbao drive, p 1 '!- sonally inspected the battle front today, Loyalist intelligence reports
said.
•% .J*
•Jj -!• •!• *!* *!• j. BELLE UNION
-jj -1- -1- -I- + *!• + -I- + 4* + * Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence McCam-l mack and son Howard and Mrs. Clara I Hill spent Thursday visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Hurst of Franklin.
Mr. and Mrs. James McCammack j of Centerton, called on Mrs. Clara ■
Hill Thursday.
Mrs. Etta Wood is staying with
Savanah Conn.
Ott Hill returned to his home after spending the winter here with Ids sister Savanah Cohn. Dallas Hodge is putting a new Grocery store in here. Anna Morris and daughter and Hazel Raikcs was in Greencastle
Thursday.
Mrs. Lawrence McCammack and son Howard was shopping in Indianapolis Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert McCammack and sons and sister Nannie was in Greencastle on business Thursday
afternoon.
Mrs. Nevada Hodge is seriously ill it the Greencastle hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson and daughter ind Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Clifford 1 and son called on Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Hodge Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hodge called on Mr. Master of near SUiesville and ipent the day with Mr. and Mrs. Kob-
-rt Fisher.
Charles Hodge spent the day Sunlay with Paul Allen Hurst.
V0NCASTLE
“Where the Crowds Go”
g r a nad
“Tile Family Th
"‘at**
I
Final Tonight
SiMONE SIMON, JAMES STEWART,
scvqim
men.
Tomorrow and Thursday A BIG MID-WEEK TREAT! IT S GOOD! BETTER SEE IT!
A wildcat oil-well \ \ makes a wildcat outta Eddie \-.}f
w with
EDWARD 1 EVERETT HORTON CHAMOTTE WYNTIB
• PORTER HAIL • A Poromounl PklvrB
COI RT PLAN CONTESTED WASHINGTON, May 4 (UP)—Thei congressional battle over Judiciary reorganization resolved today into a three-handed game of strategy in which the administration sought to clinch a partial victory for President Roosevelt’s Supreme court bill. What terms the administration will accept or make for settlement of the controversy if its latest maneuver fails to break the present stalemate
will be decided by the President, the _ senate judiciary committee was in-j^
formed in executive session by chair-
man Henry F. Ashurst. D.. Ariz. T .J ^promise (,n two instoad of s ' x ac ; day before he left on his vacation. Mr. j c,itional justices bul W0Ukl bC '' lucky
Roosevelt once more declined to re- to get anV '
quest of a friendly senator to accept a ! 2 ' Administration, whose leaders compromise. ‘ I said the y sti " werc confident of a Ashurst\s statement that “it's up to[ bare ma j° rlt y -strength to outmaneuvthe President’ came during a commit- [ ° r o PP on0nts who demaml complete
And the “I’ixilated” sister* of “Mr. Deeds Goes
To Town”.
EXTRA ADDED: EDGAR KENNEDY COMEDY COLOR CARTOON “SWING WEDDINGLATEST NEWS
Flna I Tonight nia Tomorrow and ThursdJ 2 Big Featurt ■' OK Till PRICK OF onJ 15c Balcony—20c MaJ rOU’PE GOING ij
MARGARET LIND$i JF.ffRJY D'AN - j. CAttOll HAT PENDUTON —Plus-
tee session which illustrated the division of both the committee and the senate into the following groups: 1. Opposition, whose leaders asserted that the administration forces were sounding out sentiment for a
destruction of the bill.
NOTICE OF XDMIMSTKATION Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Judge of the Circuit Court of'Putnam County. State of Indiana. Administrator of the estate of Lloyd A. Bine late of Putnam County-, deceas-
ed.
Said estate
vent.
Minerva. Blue, Administrator. May 3, 1937. Homer O. Morrison, Clerk o Putnam Circuit Court. Attorney M. J Murphy.
is supposed to be sol-
SIIEKIfi--s SALE
By virtue of a certified copy of a Decree to me directed from the Clerk
of the Circuit Court, in
wherein True Hixon
pany, is
Horace Link & Company
The Store of Furniture
1542)
cause
Lumber Coni-
Plaintiff and Carl Reagin
and Harriett Reagin, are Defendants requiring me to make the sum of one hundred and twenty-seven dollars -inn no cents, with interest on said decree and costs, I will expose at Public Sab t( the highest bidder on Saturday, the 22 day of May. A. I). 19.17, between the hours of 10 A M ; ""i t o’clock P M. of (paid day at the door of the Court House in Putnam County. Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, the following Real Estate
to-wit:
Lot Four (4) in Block Seventeen (17) in Commercial Place as shown by The Plat on file in the (ilfice of the Recorder of I utnam County, Indiana. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interests and costs, I will, at the sanu time and place e X pose at public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisemcn t . laws. John T. Suthorlin, Sheriff Putnam County. Apri 1 24. A. D. 1937. 5 Hi ' mi,t °n, Attorney for PlainUrl ' 27-31. J NOTICE OK FIN \l, SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE Notice is hereby given to the Creditor:;. Heir:: an.' Legatees of Mary M K-ng, deceased to appear in the Putnam Circuit Court, held a t Greencastie. Indiana, on the 20th day of Mav 1937. and show cause, if any, why the F inal Settlement Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not bo approved; and said heirs arc notiiioH to then and there make proof of heir ship, and receive their distributive shares. R°s.t Burk, Exec. \\ it ness, the Clerk of said Court this 26th day of April. 1937. Homer C. Morrison, Clerk Putnam Circuit Court. 27-2t
3. Compromise forces, which have gained strength rapidly as both opposition and administration sought alliances which would mean the difference between victory and defeat. Each of the three groups is a minority. But the. compromise leaders have only recently begun making real progress toward a settlement - possibly on the basis of the plan of Sen. Carl A. Hatch, D., N. M., fo ra flexible court of nine to 15 members with not more than one additional justice
appointed in a single year.
There were indications that the administration has not yet given up the j hope of winning a complete victory and t.iat the opposition, while friendly towaiit, ^he compromise group, still harl'ored^^objective of killing the
eutiry bill.
The’ best, giusl rations of the behindscenes maneouvering was an ingenious proposal by Sen. M. M. Ijogan,
Ml M IN III’ i;o|e IVON HIM | Hi;
\\\ \t;i>:
‘Blazes a tie* trail in pictures. Something to cheer about" | —fays Film Daily n
\( inn
4-3t
\i.so i.atknt \ym\ “SONG OF THE (ITT at 7:20 "Till. STOUT OF 1.01b | PASTE! R* at 8:11
D., Ky.. a In dant adminirti auppoi let 1 mittee vot.\ probably next "Hi th bill as it 1 ,J! i ministration a the understiJ that they | ments. Surprisii . >11 th"'' poll real to (iv a the propoaM analyzed, the r .m "if j to both th* ■ position and promise A' ' si the mlniini - ' i r '' al | even more than the others.
G of C. Marks 25th Birthday
i
i f id
[ Harper Sibley| m'
1 [Lament
Among the notables present in Washington, V- c trait)’" States Chamber of Commerce celebrated its sd ' tr ,*J .m-ont dur Harper Sibley, left, president of the chamber, an • • ; 1 fight, of Wilmington, Del., power behind the L influential member of the chaniW •
