The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 March 1940 — Page 5
THE DAILY BANNEH, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1940.
BA tBBtk 'He^ional Free
FIVI.AM) HAD NO CHOICF (< (tntiniM-ti friim l‘:i|>i. Onpi
on Leningrad.
The time schedule for cessation of fighting under the treaty, which e
INTEKKSTINO TID-BITS OT VAR- I! ' u '‘ on its
| signing though it is subject to ratification here within 10 days, is
Throws By U. P.
tors SCHOOLS SET DOWN
BY WRITER
follows:
JDIONDMEN’S INITIAL GAME TO BE MARCH 29
EASON HILL OPEN WITH THKWM-AMK series against l OF CHICAGO
Bowlers End Season With Dinner. Prizes
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 13--! (Russia is nominally eight hours j (UP)- Regional free throws: | east of Central Standard Time. By For domination of all-regional ' law of 19.'$0. however, all Russian teams, the palm goes to the New ' clocks were set one hour ahead on.
EIGHT TEAMS WIND CP CESSPIT, SEASON AT LEGION HOME
on the first team with Muncie Bu iis gaining one position .... the fifth SITC- New Castle starter made the sec- , ond team Port Wayne South’s j three "H’s," Hire, Hamilton, and | Hines dominated the Fort Wayne l
men ; permanent daylight saving time. Hence times given below are nine lioui: ahead of Central Standard.)
Noon today Leningrad time (3 a. m. CST) fighting ceases.
DePauw University’s varsity base--11 season will open March 29 with three-game series against the Unirsity of Chicago. The games will played at DePauw with one tilt Friday March 29, and a double--ader on Saturday, March 30. IndiUniversity, another Big Ten inference team, is also on the (hedule. Coach Lloyd Messersmith, who ached the Tigers to an Indiana nference championship two years is getting his diamondmen in ape for the seventeen game card ranged for this season. Twelve of e tilts are conference games. The gers lost most of their pitching aft by graduation but prospects int to a fast infield and outfield. ie Tigers should be strong behind plate leaving only the pitching rries to face Coach Messersmith far as his batteries are concerned, irty candidates answered the first II for material. / The complete schedule follows: arch 2!» Chicago University, here, arch 30 Chicago, here (doubleheader) . 'pril 0 At Franklin College* iprll 13- At Earlham College* ipril 16 At Indiana University bril 19 At University of Louis- ! ville pul 20 At Hanover College* ipril 23 Indiana State Teachers College, here* pril 27 Franklin College, here* ‘y 2 At Butler University* ay 7 At Wabash College* ay 11 At Ball State Teachers College* ay 14 At Indiana State Teachers* ay 17- Ball State Teachers, hero* ay 22 Wabash College, here* ay 27- Butler University, here* ^Conference games.
twlrnts Receive Athletic Awards
NAM) JONES OF GREENCASTI.K WAS ONE OP WINNERS; COMPLETE UST GIVEN
DePauw University’s Committee on ithletics, announced athletic awards r student* participating ia basket "11. Twelve varsity letters, twelve reshman numerals and six awards student mimagers were listed by e committee. Among the winners is Donald Jones of GreencaBtle. he complete list follows: Varsity basketball: Max Biggs, yahoga Falls, Ohio; George Crane, ayton. Ohio; Keith' Gallacher, Hamton, Ohio; James Honan, Lebanon; (an Lewis. Gaston; William Lynch, Jlocmfield; Guy Moore, North VemJoseph Prewitt, Martinsville: fank Roberts. Marion, Ohio; Earl bailey, Indianapolis; Angier Steele, iobinson. in.; and Fred Tucker, In-
ianapolis.
Freshman basketball: Donald
_ Troops at once establish
Eight teams climaxed the bowling I regional five Washington’s Hat- 1 zone of one kilometre
season last evening with an informal chets landed two on the all regionui !
dinner at the American Legion home, at Jasper.
There were many of the eight teams
represented at the dinner which Kok °mo's Kats found Ihe high and •
brought to a close one of the most 1 ,ow in succes si v e weeks... in th > / 10 a. m. Friday- Troops begin enjoyable and successful seasons the ' sect ‘ ona! ,,he V whaled Union Town• | withdrawal behind the new frontier
neutral
(mile.)
Troops occupying foreign territory as constituted under the treaty (that is, Finnish troops) move first.
bowling boys have had in years.
| ship with 90 points and led all the
^ . wa y •... in the regional they trailed During the course of the evening, j Marion by three points with throe cash prizes were awarded the high | minutes to go and managed to pud scoring teams. One of these prizes j througll in the cl09ing seconds ... went to Eitels Sunflowers for high Lebanon was on the other side of the
team score in three games, with
same fence, dropping a 45 to 44 de- ( cision to Freeland Park in the first ! regional game although they held a 10 point lead at the three-quarter
mark.
five man team. The. Sunflowers rolled over 2512 pins. Another prize went to K. Justus who had high individual scoring honors for one game. Mr. Justus captain of the University B team, rolled 223 pins Justus also took the high score for one man Ln three games when he rolled 560
pins.
, , | cr «*w of Coach Paul Cauldwell when The eight teams which started the .
1 the Alices eked out a one poinW , from the Happy Hunters .... for the
.'unflowc is. | p aS £ £ W0 years his Jasper five down-
| ed the Huntingburg quintet in the
sity B; 6th, Zinc Mill A; 7th. Mid 1 9eCtlonal8 -
in that part of Finnish territory south of Lieks (Lieksa in eastern Finland is 115 miles north of Lake
Ladoga.)
10 a. m. Saturday Troops begin withdrawal in that part of the territory lying north of Lieksa. A distance of seven kilometres (4'_. miles) is to be kept between the ieai guard of the withdrawing troops
of the ad-
ament
bowling season last fail finished in I
this order: 1st, Eitel’s
2nd, Kroger's Grocers: 3rd, Stever.s Drugs; 4th, Zinc Mill B: 5th, Univer-
„ ... and the advance guard Coach Woody Weir of Vincennes, | vancing troops
formerly of Jasper, retained his The xvIthdrawal is to be completed of never having lost a tourn- : var j OUSi iy between March 19 and game to the Huntingburg | March 26 in six zones which are set
j The Russian occupying army is to I be withdrawn from the city of Pet- ! samo in the Arctic region by April
i 10.
Finland Is to evacuate the Hango | peninsula, leased to Russia for 30
West and in last place University A. Kroger’s Melvin Merriman, Paul Cox, Noble Cox, Sam Sellers, Mur! Giddings, and John Rodney. Eitel’s Sunflowers Jacob Eitel, Kenneth Eitel. George Long, Maynard Shonkwiler, Frank Schoenman and Chester Jarvis. Midwest Russell Anderson, Emil Jurrick, Freddie Riggs, Casey Gaddas, Dewe! Bryant and Jesse Cox. Stevens Drug—Bob Stevens, Harold Collins, Bob Myers, Chas. Bell and Raymond Bee. Zinc A—L. S. Gifford, Austin Andrews, Eugene Girton, Woody Watson, Gilbert Twomey, L. R. McNeeley. Zinc B—Ken Bryan, Wilbur Crawley. Chet Crawley, Nelson Hardy, Wayne Pell, Frank O’Calahan and Andrew- Olsen. University A- -Dick Hurst, Frank Devaney, Johnson, Ernie Collins and Dobber Crodian. University B William Alexander, H. Callendar, Chet Cooper, Carl Myers and Ellington.
Add gymnasium touches .... the Jasper goalhouse has Venetian blinds. It’s reported that a few betters on the outcome of the Vincennes-Wash-ington final battle prevailed upon the officials to call back to the floor a Washington player who was fouled as the gun ending the game sounded but did not shoot his free throw. Die score w'as 29 to 26 for the Hatchets and it seems that a little money rested on whether the final margin j
SALES TALK RECORDED PASADENA, Cal., (UP) Future salesmen being educated at the Pasadena Junior College now use a "voice microscope.” Records are made of sales talks by the students and these are later reproduced before the class, permitting them to detect just where and how the high pressure salesman's “sales talk” began slipping and presumably eausjd him to miss a sale.
use Daily banner adver USING FIRST — Everybody whe Reads, Reads a Newspaper Ever Day.
Ohio; Neil Hercules, Kokomo; Donald Jones, Greencastle; Richard Fi’.lbrandt, St Joseph, Mich.; Rex Renz, Auburn; James Sears, Indianapolis; Jordan Sheperd. Clayton, Mo„ Harold Spicer, Gosport; and William Thatcher, Chicago. Managers and trainers: Martin Kresge, Wilmette, 111 ; Jules Nathan, Mt. Carmel, 111.; Edward McDonald,
;*“• ,m!,Keu,,u,: XJUnu,u Janeavdlle, Wise.; Wilbur Allison, Ztl Ind “T P ° U8: Jame8 Brl *SM In dianap„li.s: Ralph Aldrige, Koko-
-olumbus, Ohio; Dean Dooley, Dayon Ohio Harry Hendrick, Norwood, |
- 2
fMARY MAY 6
■ - _
*
. 'w
.I! %
:ES£L
was three or four points.
Portland may have been licked bv j the Fort Wayne South five in the first regional game, but the victory was a trifle costly for the Archers . Carl Braden, a staring forward, suffered a pulled tendon which might keep him out of action in the semifinal . . . . Bob Hines, center, skinned his leg and probably will be ready for action, but without the benefit of practice.... Keith Spiker, the other starting forward, suffered a badly cut mouth, but should be ready for
action.
Statistically speaking for both the sectional and the regional*. Lapel, an unknown, holds a scant two point margin .... Lynnville, the second unknown, has the best defensive average, Lapel, the poorest .... in Lapel’s five tourney games their total advantage over opponents is 19
points.
When Lafayette Jefferson won n two point victory from Frankfort in an afternoon clash at the Bronchos’ regional, It set one record . . . th' 1 first time that an Everett Case coached team has ever lost three times in one season to any one op-
ponent.
Muncie Burris fans expected that whoever won the New Castle-Burris final contest, the margin would he slim .... but forgot that Burris downed a tough Trojan five last year., so New Castle, still smailing, walloped the Owls, 59 to 31. More statistics .... Rushville’s Lions were by far the hottest field goals shooting club of the 32 in th' 1 regional final battles ... the Rushville quintet sank an astounding percentage of .435 .... the nearest rival was Logansport with a .387 figute while Bloomington hit .381 .... onlv North Vernon and New Castle of th > others victors hit over 200 and Hammond Tech was the only winn to hit less than .200. On the losing side two clubs, New ! Albany and Brookste-n, hit ever .300 ! and Brookston lost to Logancport while the New Albany quint wen’ down before Mitchell whr hit a mea ;- ly .277 against the Bulldogs’ .314 . . . Freeland Park ha* the poorest record, .106 wdth Muncie Burris a clo.-e second with .135. From the foul circle Washington’ Hatchets gained top honors, cracking through every gift toss for a 1.000 figure . . South fiend Riley hit 7.50 and Garret, only remaining winner who hit above the .700 mark, cracked .714... Lawrenceburg, th'’ onlv loser above the .700 mark, hn
.733.
j years as a naval base for a yearly j rental of 8,000,000 Finnish marks (8120.000) a year, within 10 days. The Russian and Finnish armies agree that defensive fortifications, power stations, industrial buildings, telephone exchanges, telegraph stations and communal buildings shall
be left intact.
Prisoners are to he exchanged as
soon as possible.
Representatives named by the high
| commands are to settle on the spot any questions which may arise dur-
ing the withdrawal periods. The last war communique issued
by the Leningrad military command, directing war operations, said today as th:' peace treaty was being sign-
ed:
‘‘March 12 nothing important happened on the front.’’
treaty removes the possibility of war in Scandinavia and consequent Soviet involvement in Nordic Europe. It definitely assures the security of Leningrad and the Kronstadt naval base, headquarters of the Baltic fleet. The treaty provides for the construction of a railroad linking Kandalashka, on the White Sea. and Kemijaervi in mid-Finland. This railroad, about 140 miles long, will link a growing Russian industrial district of the far north with the Gulf of Bothnia and Sweden through the Kemijervi - Rovaniemi-Torni iHaparanda (Sweden) railroad. Cession of the Sredni and Ribachii peninsulas in the Arctic zone assure Russia strategic control of the icefree Finnish port of Petsamo. Thus Russia’s far northern Lenin-grad-Murmansk railroad gets a link with Sweden at its most imporant intermediate station, and Murmansk, the northern terminus, is additionally safeguaided by the strategic control of Petsamo. The preamble of the t reaty states that security of Murmansk and the railroad, as well as of Leningrad, is a main feature. Article l of the treaty provides for cessation of hostilities under the time table set in a protocol. Article II gives Russia (a) the ertire Karelian isthmus including Viipuri, Finland’s second city, and Vii puri bay and the islands in the buy: (b) the western and northern shores of Lake Ladoga with the towns of Sortavala, Suojaervi and Kaekisalmi, thus giving Russia the Suojaervi-Sor-tavala railroad to Lake Ladoga; (c) a number of islands in the Finnish gulf; (d) Finnish territory east of Maerkajaervi in mid-Finland, 50 miles west of the frontier; with the toivn of Kuolajaervi. thus giving additional .security to the Murmansk railroad which approaches to within 40 miles of the old frontier in this region; (e) part of the peninsulas of Sredni and Ribachii in the Petsamo district. Details of the frontier are to be fixed by a mixed commission, which is to be formed within 10 days. Article III provides that the parties shall refrain from any attack on each other, and shall not conclude any alliances or participate in any coalition directed against each other. Article IV binds Finland to lease Hango with the waters surrounding it in a radius of five miles to the south and east and three miles to the west and north of the peninsula, as well as the islands adjacent. Article V (a) binds Russia to re-
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From the Russian viewpoint the move its troops from the Petsamo
region and (b) binds Finland to maintain no armed ships in Petsamo waters of more than 100 tons, except for 15 armed ships of not more than 400 tons; to maintain in the waters no submarines or armed aircraft, and to maintain no military ports, naval bases or repair shops except such as might be needed for the ships specified. Article VI gives Russia and its citizens the right of free transit across the Petsamo region to Norway and back. Freights in transit from Norway to Russia are exempted from inspection or payment of customs and others dues. Article VII provides for the railroad specified before between Kandalaksha and Kemijaervi, the road to be built possibly this year, and gives sian, Finnish and Swedish languages between Russia and Sweden along the railroad. Article VIII provides for restora-
tion of Russo-Finnish economic relations and for the negotiation of a trade treaty. Article IX provides for the immediate operation of the general treaty and its ratification. The treaty was drafted in the RusRussia the right of transit of goods and was dated yesterday. Signatories were: Russia: Premiet-Foreign Commissar Viaclieslav Molotov, Andrei Zhdan, of the presidium of the supreme Soviet, and Alexander Vassil■yskyf. bfkgad commandet of the army. Finland: Premier Risto Ryti, J. K. Passikivi, minister without portfolio in the cabinet; Gen. Rodolf Walden, of the army, and Viano Voionmaa, a parliamentary leader of the dominant social democratic party and a former minister of commerce. The Finnish delegates were expected to leave for home today.
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ONLY 16 DAYS
REMAIN IN WHICH TO BUY A BETTER USED CAR OR TRUCK AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS UNUSUAL OFFER! PRICES CUT TO THE BONE On every Used Car a"d Truck in Our Entire Stock.
^
HERK’S HOW! ONE CASH PRIZE
$25.00
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RIG TRAIN'S BUTTON—Walter Johnson, former baseball player '‘"own as th« "Big Train," i* campaigning for Congress in a Maryland district. This is the campaign button he uses. He was a Washington Senators gtfehar.
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GREENCASTLE MOTORS
7
115 NORTH JACKSON STREET
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
