Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 September 1928 — Page 2

GREENCASTLE HERALD PAGE TWO

THE HERALD!

DEPAUW ALUMNI PICNIC AT LEBANON SEPT. 26

First Photos in Mafta Kidnaping

Kntnbllshed as the Star & Democrat

in 1858

Entered as Second Class mail matter at the Greencastle, Ind., postotllce. Charles J. Arnold Proprietor

lA'Itoy Bee City Editor, | )(J awarded in Hoy Evans Manager L onteHt! , Fred

A program of golf. Iiridge and danc ing and a chicken dinner has been) arranged by the Indianapolis DePamv i Alumni Association, to be held at the! Clen Country Club at I^ebanon Sept.| 26. Reservations for one hundred and) fifty alumni are expected. Prizes will

both golf and bridge C. Tucker, George

1 ublished every afternoon, except ,dmi< a nd Hughes Patton arc on the

Sunday, at 17-13 South Jackson Street, Greencastle, Indiana, tele

PHONE 65.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

golf committee; Mrs. G. B. Taylor Guernsey VanRiper and Mrs. Harold! Sutherlln, bridge; Mrs. James C. Car-1 ter, Mrs. Neal Grider and Mrs. Earl \V. Kiger, dinner and decorations; • Gcorgi’ W. Kadcl, Ray 1). Jackson and

By mail in Putnam County, $3.00 a Marshall D. Abrams, music, and Wal- 1 year; outside Putnam County, $3.50 lace Weatherholt, John Clark and u year; In Greencastle, by carrier, Neal Grider, finance. Fred A. Likely 10c a week; weekly edition, $1.50 a is president and Mrs. James C. Carter, year; advertising rates on applica- secretaary of the association,

tlon.

6 6 6

cutMammimsa

USE BUCK SHOT

Cures Malaria and quickly relieves Biliousness, Headaches and Dizziness Instead Of Bird Shot—Advertise In due to temporary Constipation. A ds in eliminating Taxins and is highly THE HERALD esteemed for producing copious wat-1 cry evacuations. ——>

Republican Editor Assails G. O. P. In Reply to Letter Asking Support

WASHINGTON.—The attitude of tho intelligent Western farmer who baa studied the causes of his present predicament, and who realises what a continuance of the Coolidge politics would mean to him, ts strikingly set forth In a letter received by Herbert N. Strause, of tho Republican Business .Men, Inc., from Willis A. Wells, Republican editor of the

Webster tS. Dak.) Journal.

The South Dakota editor had been asked by Mr. Strause to support Her- ; bert Hoover and to send a reply which could be published. Hero Is 1

tho reply:

"Voti request that I Join the r.epubllran Business Men, Inc., of your city, In promoting the election of Mr. Hoover upon the sole ground that 'he will carry out the Coolidge policies.’ Your plea leaves mo as cold as the ice fields of a ioUr sea.

the farm work begins at sunrise, we are so opposed to a continuance oi the < ; that it ! wrote you what 1 think it wouldn’t look good In print, and so I Eliall modify my ex

prrnslons.

’’Under the Coolidge policies, which Mr. Hoover is pledged to continue, we have had more farm bankruptcy and more rural distrr s than has existed sine ■ our pioneers came West In covered wagons and conquered the

prairies.

"You really have no realization ot what these Coolidge policies have | done to a great and flourishing agri i cultural section of the country. "Farm lands have depreciated $30, 000,000,000 in value. Fifty thousand businefs men have gone broke. Four thousand rur..l hanks have failed. “While Coolidge was President. Congress, representing the people, pa • 1 fa?m relief bills twice and

“Pay us $<30,000 o»your son diesl" That wa« telephone message to parents of William Ranieri, 10, of Chicago, after kidnapers had made off with boy while he was returning

William and hustle him into an automobile. She’s pointing to spot where car slithered to a standstill and waited for boy. Below, the pretty home of boy’s wealthy contractor-father,

Bearded Lady,” and Inveigle him into a gem robbery, out of which he emerges with glory. If you don't want to laugh, don’t see ‘‘Ginsberg the Greatl'* jjgn jj*. 1 CUNTON FALLS

on Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Boswel, l* 1 day evening near Brick Chain. Mr. and Mrs. Ward Arnold ana daughter spent Sunday win, Bettis and daughters.

Wallace Spencer has sick.

Ix-en

Several from around here attended the Fair at Greencastle the past week. Mrs. Opal Shonkwiler ts spending a few days with her sister-in-law. Mrs. Fannie Sigler was called to Laporte Sunday night by the serious illness of her grandson, Paul, little son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Boswell. Nellie Bettis and little son, Eula Staggs, Callle Bettis, Minnie Brattain and Lida Pierce tacked comforts .Monday evening at Goldie Bee’s. Mr. and Mrs. Olan Davis and son who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Davis have returned home. Russell Boswell of Ellettsville spent Thursday night with Mr. And Mrs. Joe Staggs. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Phillips spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Newgent. Worth Cunningham spent Sunday with Eldon and Eugene Staggs. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Williams and little niece, Joan Boswell, visited Mr. and Mrs. Abner Sigler Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Staggs and two

Wins in Wisconsin

Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Ranaly of i m ,| anapolls, Mi. and Mrs. pj ( spent Snuday with Mr. and u Elbert Bettis. The Ladies Aid will meet Wodnc-s. day with Callie Bettie.

home from school. Left, Shirley Thomas, and, inset, portrait of William as he is today,

schoolmate of boy, who saw two men seize

KJU.U ifiT. ----J grres.-a yr.-»

"Aa a Republican I enthusiastically | twice the man higher up vetoed them.

dcclino to do any such fool thing. I am for Hoover Just about as far as you can throw our party elephant by the pin feathers with your arm broken

In four places.

“Out In the West, where men are mortgaged up to the eyebrows and

That Is the paramount Coolidge policy. We have been fooled twice. Don’t think, my Wall St. friend, you can do it again. “With kindest personal regards, you are at liberty to publish this and go to the devil.”

j THE THEATERS |

THE VONCASTLE

starts out to do some detective work by herself, fihe A ids the man who Is accused and he piotcsts his innocence while the male reporters scoff at her. Tin man Is convicted and sentenced to die. She still believes in his innocence, altho his bride has left him.

"A Woman Against the World.” The day of the ex- • utlon arrives and Is Shown On Local Screen she has been unabl> to find any new "A Woman Against the World," a I evidence to save the life of the man Tiffuny-Stahl production is booked for'she has fallen in love with. When the feature picture attraction coming j leaving the prison .-he hears of anothto the Voncastle theatre commencing !e> murder, similar to ihe one the conWednesday. Idemhed man was convicted for. Fran"A Woman Against The World,” j tically she gets In touch w ith the potell- a thrilling and exciting tale ol i lice, intercepts the man who is accusa girl reporter who gets a position on led of the latest enme and by a smart a great Metropolitan newspaper and ruse makes the n n confess the first

finds that when it comes to getting assignments on big stories Mie is left out in the cold. While covering a tashionable wedding she stumbles upon a clue to a murder mystery and

murder. Then st i ts a race to save the life of the innocent man, who is snatched from the electric chair at the very last moment, and the lovers are reunited.

THE GRANADA Jessel Now Due With •’Ginsberg the Great" "Ginsberg tho Great,” with George Jessel, a Warner Bros.’ production, comes to the Granada Theatre Wednesday for a run of two days. Both story and scenario of this uproarious series of adventures were done by Anthony Coldeway, and the production was directed by Byron Huskln. The cast includes, besides the solemnly ludicrous Georgie Jessel, Audrey Ferris, Gertrude Astor, Douglas Gerrard, Jack Santoro, Theodore Lorch, Jimmie Quinn and Stanley Sanford. The tale is that of a small-town boy who enlivens the tedium of his tailor apprenticeship by reading up on magic and planning to win fame and fortune. To hasten that end he joins a strolling carnival who star him as "Jo-Jo the Dog- faced Boy" and “The

iwe- ^ Here is Walter Kohler, the big bathtub and fixture man of Wisconsin, who is the new gov-ernor-elect of his home state. lit lives in Kohler, Wis. {Ituernatlooal Nansreal)

Simple Stone Now Marks Grave of Lincoln’s Mother

The only monument to data erected to honor her of whom Lin. coin said, "All that 1 am or ev»r hope to be 1 owe to my angel mother." This marker, at tha grave of Nancy Hnnka Lincoln was erected by P. E. Studebaker t friend of Lincoln, In 1879

Alfred H. Yates, an 83 y nr old native of Bpencor County Indiana, makes an annual pIlRdtuege to Lincoln City to clean and rsre for thla long neglected, aacred spot Lincoln during hi* life frequently oxpreaaod the Intention of erect tog a fitting monument to bla mother, but he felt tt a aacred duty, not to be trusted strangers. and hts buay life nud :.timely death prevented him from carrying out bit wishes Lincoln’* mother will be perpetually honored tn the new In dlana Lincoln Shrine to be erected on tb« *pot where »he died, helping to build a nation.

BOYS! BOYS! BOYS! A Brand New Bicycle Given Away FREE!!

Didn’t you ever want a bike of your very own? Think of the loni? rides you can take. I hink how much quicker you can get back and forth from school, or run errands. And, what’s more this is a real bike. A brand new Speedwell, with tires, coaster brake, ’n everything.

Contest is on NOW! Don’t wait till tomorrow. Comedown to the Herald office right away. See the bike. Look it over. Then enter your name in the contest, get your instructions and supplies, and start to work. You are eligible for the first prize. Every boy under 16 may try. All we ask is that you get out and hustle, and boost The HERALD all the time.

All you need to do to earn this machine is 10 get subscriptions to The GREENCASTLE HERALD, Greencastle’s fastest growing news paper. It’s easy to sell, for it’s a real live paper, full of news of Greencastle and of the rest of the world. Each start order, anywhere in the city, counts 100 points toward the new bike.

To Our Grown-up Readers This is a bona fide contest. Your boy or your neighbor's boy, or anyone else may enter and be assured of a fair deal and an equal chance at the prize. If you are not now a subscriber, give your order to the hoy who asks for it. He is worthy of your help. And The Herald is easily worth twice as much as the small sum of 10 cents a week wh : ch it costs you. Remember that HERALD delivery service is guaranteed !f you ever fail to qet your copy anv efternoon, phone 05 t.nd your paper will arrive promptly.

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