The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 February 1924 — Page 4
THE DAILY BAYITEH, f>EE EHCASTLX IHDIAJVA. TUESDAY TEBEUAEY 8, 1884
V?i*n
i' I
PREVO & THOMAS
Fanerai Directors
Ambulance Service at Any Time
I
V'STT?^
I
II B[ NECM!
H S^OHY WONT REPEAT ITSELF .S OEMOCRATIC CCN'.tNT ON IS NEW YORK THIS YEAR.
3/ EDWARD S C-ARK —An oid-tim-r D***> '*at- : In WmL*&z- -a. » i
luu tnai j* one wa aeA n&emt la >>* ' Jna-e. "la UM6 H ratio sa.i •'actaallj' wa« irxi ct^t aj tt<»r !>*•&-■-era tl<: He tlLAt ft will ta'. in* »•.. ia«to« Mr McA-l
LZ *t s W | r r.iatory *m | . -t city n-it j •>e^<S into ae-1 n-yfaiaatlofL" I * b-» •ira^xtilr. twOer-
Mr_ Sr-.itt. Mr. LLUiia •>£ * < U> accept tte
il.i. - a, or kay or la mt art >t- • 1 n.r cocrea-
.
Phenes: Res. 693—Office 305
S F u'.-na fe tion.
It U only in —-«ts-n bit !« It b* p *a.’1 that th»rr ar* two li ratio 5^y- ^ iti* im tirijag today. Tlw* L^aiorrati^ ■ I eaadldatr of ISSU bad arttbrr aoaa a J 'iac^nufm. bat bo bad a art bow. Ho-j 3 ratio, tbr s^ood. wfco dl^d s-.tco yean j * a? lea * .nz a mb tb ratio, wbo Blao j g :.: • a *• r.. another H'-rit. . T..e pre*- |
?. t ent Horatio Seyrr. U'virjc in '.sata M
NAVY RE- C :ES OVER THE FINE SHOW NO S**E MADE WHEN TORN LOOSE BY GALE. 1 / EOoa = D B. CLARK Waac.:r.^ < —It -e«na to be a«*nr*: | tbat the gae -* wla« whi.* the j U«Ater-thanwlr nary dirlglbte Sheoandoab caa :» -n it broke beeie in »J •eTecty-c... j t--' re^Qtly will assore j Its entry ' tie dash for the pole I
neit year
It is VLiz-'. ■- Lavy cirries that an j ainhip wt; :. *n Maad the terrifr: I b'iffe'.cx * t-'-e ahanandoab re ctiTt<3 fr>yr., tt.-r *- ad*] wpiicci I
x the face of w ha: I x t .r. * i nd and make its ;«>tt on the groand.. :ne troabies which Ji m» to it from wind! •c conditions in the j ind ■'•an cotnpiete «i amey which has be
ns."
ANNOUNCING a change of ownership of The Ideal Grocery
can ton- ahTirtually wn-
its way back
can undergo
are likely r
and atmosp •
polar rey.
EGIXNIXG Monday mornin?. I took charee of the Ideal Grocery store and will continue to bandit- tLe same hi^rh grade line of groceries that this store has always carried. I will also
continue to give the peep], f this community the best of service at the lowest p cost. For anything in the grc-cery department, give us a call.
BROAD PARK
TV Ml ‘ionary Society of the Okriatian Cfcarca will meet with Mrs. W. E. Hateheson, 123 E. Washington St, Wednes-iay afternoon a: 2 30. Misi Dana Wko* died Fnday mortmgr of p.tea/nor..a at tne home or uzic* William Fisher. Fanerai services were held at the SthesviUe tlensUar. Church Sunday afternoon. tierwkes beir.5 conducted by Eer. HherLl and Rer. Fisher. FVaaar.t Hearin of State Normal ;p*mt the week end with home folks. Eev. Frank Stafford was a dinner tynest of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Steir-
vra.t Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Doraett of Monrovia spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Gilbert Prichard.
Tom Staley and family spent Fri-
- -day with Albert Wallace and family, weeks duration.
Walter Meek helped John Domett
batcher hoe- Tnurscay.
Care nee Sims spent Thtarsday night eith Jasper Bunk and family. Little George and Wallace Parker calle«t on th‘:r aunt, Mrs. Bertha McCaur.mack Thursday afternoon.
If all the dire tr. te this republie tl before national e? woaid happen to it their cb*,..;e were
ts an engineer j ^ i had happened j pry.i-idaas ^a.Yf j ""' •ns preacted | if a u.an not of elected president.
was charged with . non-explosire. It that the seal of
there wou.d not be a * •-! of l.i.erty left in this land. The people, bow -xer, seem to he satisfSe-d that In c^n- • Iderable raeasnre they hare the aane | kind of freedom that was the F/yful [posaeas: s of their forefathers, and
Eros A-lee of Purdue spent the I therefore if one may be allowed to week end with his parents Mr. ar.di# T « opinion, some ..berty is pretty Mrs. William Allee. t0 r«u**Q «■ United States Mrs. Bell Uttell caUe-i on Mi© lit- wfc * t * T#r v STnrt"/ . . . - _ , , land m New Vork in the month of
tel. and family Sunday afternoon., I, thU y . ar
E. C. Wiiox was ca-.ed from W70., pr.o- to the RepaWIcsn coBrentions to the bee-ide of his daughter, Dana 0 f 1ST2 and 1212 the ght-et of Caesar-
! ism walked abroad in America. In a
W;kox who ha* been quite ill. Roy McCammark who had his leg
fractured last week is doing nicely. ;•* Baltimore In 1V72, August Beim n' Mrs. Eva Coleman and children I “ w ’- ie rrtd,Q « thn>a? '- th * c<jn '
called n Mrs. R. C Hodge Thursday
afternoon.
renticn hall.
D r* Fo••easts of Oth*' Yeara.
. In his speech Mr. Beine- nt said that
The revival services closed Sunday 0r , 2t ^ t eongrew. a night at Walnut Chapel after two rorgresi from which all love of ilheny
I
FLAN for cooking rice
PROPERLY 1
Coekirg R.ce So Tl-at It It Flaky and Each Gram Separate. «!*r*p»r*d by th» Lf.t*e Sutn D-s«rtn-.*»t »t Af r caltur* ) Tll< e can be cooked so that rt 1* flaky and so ea-h grain remains separate, way f rfd s{c.-c;lalista in the United State* Department of Agriculture. To ob* fast th * result wash the rice th./roughly, boll It in a large proportion of water, and do ew overcook. » : -if-* *f dry rice, use e or 5 quarts of water, and 1 ten spoonful of wait. V,'. -he rice through several waters until all the loose starch is re-mos-d. 1. iraln It. Have the boiling water teady In a deep saucepan, add five sail. .nwly drop In the rice, and allow It to boll rapidly for about 15 or 20 i/taotr or until a grain when pressed between the thumb and finger Is
wntJe-'r v. x.
’It. ord t ta prevent the rice from sticking to the pan, lift It if necessary fTon ii : > time with a fork, but do not stir It. for stirring Is likely to break the grains When sufllcientiy cooked, turn the rice Into a colander or a sieve, end afrer the water has drained off. cover with a cloth and set over a pan : nett
w< hot wat-r on the back of the stove or In the oven; or turn the rice into a Bhaiiow pan cover with a Ud. and place it In a warm oven for a short time,
^kwued in tiUs way the grains awell and are kept separate.
had departed, was assuming all the functions of government of whatever k-a<L and that the bayoaets of a military despotism already were flashing in the sun. The New Yorker declared that “Caeaarism and centralization are undermining the foundations of our • federal system and sweeping away all constitutional bulwarks." In 1012 when Roosevelt entered the campaign for the nomination against Taft the ghost of Caesar.sm walked ! again, or at least so the Democrats (and many Republic ana made deelara- | tion. The republic, however, still lives. The country always goes to the devil in a thousand different ways Just before the delegates to the great national convention start toward tbe
meeting halls.
1 In the aftermath goss'p of the meet- ' ings of the Democratic national committee. there is to be found little to i suggest that New York became the choice as the convention city because of a desire to check the ambitions of William O. MrAdoo. Many of Mr. iMcAdoo's friends voted for New York feeling, they said, that t-e.r chief had a start on the road t* victory and that even the Alfred E. Smith enthusiasm of the metropolis could not make for the favorite's defeat. In 1962 the Democratic convention was held la Chicago in what was called the Wigwam. The roof of the Wigwam leaked. The smallest hole in it was the skylight. There was a real wet sad dry issue before the Democrats In that convention. All the delegates carried umbrellas to the hall, and a good many of them were compelled to use them, for the heavens remained open for four days and poured their contents oa the mo-e or less de-
voted beads^belnw.
Abua« of the Day Soon Forgotten. The New York delegation that year, with the sole exception of one man. was for the nomination of Etavid BenHiU. The New Yorkers said
WHY BANKS?
LESSON III By J. H. PUELICHER, Chairman. 'Committee on Public Education, American Bank-m Association. Banka are defined aa “institutions chartered to receive depo$itt and make leans." What La a bank depositt What is * bank loant BANK DEPOSIT “ money or checks left with a bank to be kept safe from thieves, fire or other loss; ^ to earn interest, if in a sav- ^ /> Ings account; to be conven- ■ **•. lent for the future use of the depositor; to be loaned out -M9 to earn the expenses of the bank’s services, and interest for the depositor when in an interest bearing account. SANK LOAN ** advance of money to help business — enterprise so that business may again help the earner and saver by giving employment la the Middle Age* safes were very few. Goldsmiths kept their jewelry m strong boxes, end also accepted for safekeeping, for a fee, money packed and marked with the owner’s name. In those days money saved lay idle; today It is put to work by banka for tbe benefit of the depositor and the community.
things about Grover Cleveland, a citizen of their state, which made some of tiie delegates from other places think that the last word had been used in If-nunclatlon. However, although New York was strongly opposed to tne nctn [nation of Cleveland, he carried off
the prize.
Whoever it Is that shall win the prize in New York probably may rest assured that the delegates will forget all the bad tilings they may have said against him in the convention hall. After Cleveland had been called everything Just this side of things i constituting criminal libel, the New York Democrats went home and said It was all In the game, "but we wanted Hill." The party men from Good Ground, L. I.. to Buffalo on the Lake. Taromanyltes and all. worked for the election of Cleveland and elected him. When you hear anything about a -andidate In national convention from a delegate who opposes that candidates nomination, do rot believe it. Generally speaking, after the convention the delegate himself will tell you that the bent of controversy made him a first-class liar.
Many War Monuments Two hundred and forty moouinents are to be placed In France and Belgium to mark the whole front of Ger man invasion. The stone markers will line the historic land from the North ■ea to tbg Swiss frontier.
cessfuiiy the ;
marked out for
The Shena:.
Ledum gas wt. l was only re -
approval was p.' n this kind of gas by the scier. • *t« and the experimenter*. Heretof re the dirigible* b*v» been charged *'.'L -ipl sive gas andj the result ha* —r. at times that disaster has overtaken them because
this fact.
While the Navy department i* enthusiastic and rheerfui over the con-, duct of the - p .n the terrific wind! by which it was forced mile* from !U base before it could turn its nose into the gale, it Is Just as enthusiastic, perhap*. alti 1-" -nthosiawn modestly is hidden over the conduct of the crew of the s ..enandoalL who kept their cocraxe and d;d their work ot self and ship salvation with as much unconcern ts if they were working under a deed calm and under a bright •unshine 00 the ground outside of the
door of the hangar. Brave Officece and Men.
Captain Helnen of the Shenandoah, who is a spec!a. employee of the navy,
has been giver, the hi
GUY CALL, PHONE
proprietor 8 2
ieE!SE3S£3eSESEsaSS3Ea3ae33SSE3E3®BBaSS^e^Ha3l
ipmrui in ii
SB
eniti ><•. acj ***• act Sc* g#iset 4
DePAUW NOTES
Late registration of two students brings the total in the College of Liberal Arts and Music School tt 1266. Miss Bradford, Registrar, announces that fraternities and sororities may obtain grades of their pledges at the end of two weeks. Men’s Hal! Association has elected
PURDUE RATION BOOSTS MS FLOW "l PER CENT
Five Farm Cows Brooht to University and Fed Properly Show Big Gain.
LAFAYETTE, led. Feb. 5.—One of the most striking demonstrations of what good feeding wfi do in a dairy herd has been provioed in a
gh^ U kln“'of t **<■ following officers for the ensuing feeding experiment recently conduct- ^ care for ^ __ from the semester: Quinton Stone, president; ed at Purdue University, in w^ick ^ received. *hi
fed more than eight
amount. Tnese five a 3
due herd returned $£*3 feed cost, yet eight «wj
an income over fee-: «?. T -J
five cow s returned to the
the previous year w-clttinj
ed only *«21. Therefore would have fed. milked, 1 cared for more than !uL'( many cows as would tivel essary for him to feed)
praise, that which come* — - , , . , . . . .
men wh* worked under him amid the Terrance Kieckner, treasurer; Tnec- “- 7 t ?rade eows^ nemg fe. poor.y by a income over feed ex J
terrible conditions of a midnight rtorui dore Conrad, secretary; Carl Gartlein, dairymen out over the 3tote, were j esg than could hive and the winter's cold when death librarian. The organization includes brought to the university and given these five cows, we J fed
Hall, Men’s Annex, and Rosa Bower. Dr. Post ,who has been confined to his home for several days, was able
seemed ima-tect L.ectenant K.cca.4 independent men living in Men’s
s regular navy ©fleer, also showed un-
concern and high heroism.
The army and navy record* contain | many *torie» of high heroism of men
under the stress of danger, of men to meet his classes today, who ■eomisgl; facing certain death Professor Caldwell, who has been yet manage to stand staunchly by the very ^ vrith the mumps, is still untradltions of American seamanship ab , e t0 mw . Us <las5€s .
and aoldierahlp. Army and navy men who serve in airships and airplanes
New Rector scholars for this se-
al! say that prior to *heir entrance are Albert M. Campbell. a.. from Miami
Into the fiymg service they felt as all lace Lozier. Russell Sayger, Mason, other men feel that the certainty of Indiana: Leroy Eader, Frankton, In-
death through a fall to the earth In case anything should happen to airship or flying machine would add so much to the weight of general apprehension that their belief was that they
could not "■**«■* It out."
diana; and Oscar Zaph, Evansville. Sigma Nu announces the pledging of Oscar Zopf and Joe Schaaf.
the proper rations Their average increase in milk production for the year was 71 per cent as a result and their profit above feed cost was 74 per cent more than that above feed cost when fed the old way. It is one of the best lessons ever brought home to dairymen not only in this
but also in other states.
The cows, three from Lake and one
and Orange coun-
ties. were selected because of their good average dairy type or conform-
A RELIABLE COUGH I Why experiment wifi remedies for that coucawj you can secure FOLEY'S AND TA R .VI- 7NT reliable rente:;, for u* ■ v uh?. 0 l. - - I made up of rrs| ieits and is ple.-ir.: aril take. R. P. MULLIN' ’Ttd ta. tb, il
AS TO GROUND HOG DAY
Now one Is told by men who make a, 0 practice of service flying that when Ldltor Banner:
they are flying they never think of the possibility of a fall. It seems, as near *s one can determine, that they have overcome the chief fear of them all. •nd have relegated it into the place of the forgotten. Old time flyers say that if a man gives thought to the certainty of death If a wing or something else breaks, he will so unnerve himself as to unfit him for the service. The type of courage which the crew of the Shenandoah showed in tbe wll4 flight of the airship In the fury of the storm is that kind which haa been shown through the years by other navy men not la the air, but on the sea. There are cases on record where captains of tbe American aavy have
remained at their posts on the bridge ean homes
of Ship* during the continuation of hurricanes for seventy-two hours at a stretch without s* much as a minute 1
sleep
Courags and Endurancs. The writer of this on one occasion Just after tbe close of tbe war was on • naval ship which was bringing troops back from France. It was a comparatively small vessel, a converted f assenger ship in fact, and seemingly it was not sufficiently ballasted. A Number 12 gale struck this ship and for several days It could make little or no progress. Tbe month was December and a Number 12 gale represents the highest wind known to the sailors. It is said that on one occasion on that trip tbe mind rose to the rate of 120 miles an honr. The captain of this ship was an Annapolis graduate, and a comparatively young man. On the ship were about 600 American soldiers. 502 of them being wounded men. The captain staid on the bridge for forty-eight hours, once In awhile going into the chart house Just back of his post to swallow a cup of hot coffee. He brought his ship through safely and treated the whole affair as if it were of no moment. It Is easy enough to understand why the navy laws and the merchant marine laws make the captain of a ship supreme in his authority over everybody on i/oard, passengers among the others. Where the safety of passengers and crew depend upon a certain line of conduct among the individuals on the ship the captain can do what he chooses with any one In order to insure that a line of proper conduct Is pursued. Almost literally he Is lord over life nnd death.
There is, very property, growing a disposition to discredit the groundhog, or woodchuck, as a weather prophet. People who are in the woods and fields during the winter know that the animal some times
ation. because they had low produc- Wed Feb_b. 0PEKA1 tion during the past year as shown Ur KfiiH
by their cow testing association records, and because they were from herds where good feeding methods had not been employed. They were brought to Purdue and given average farm conditions with a ration consisting of a legume hay such as alfalfa and silage throughout the winter, and a balanced grain ration, or the 4-2-1 mixture recommended generally for dairymen over the state by Purdue—four parts of ground
R0TARIANS WILL HA1
BIG
- ■•>■ — (Continued irom paM
leaves its burrow as early as January,
if the weather is mild, and occasional- CO rn, two of ground oats or bran and ly its tracks have been seen in the one ^ oilmeal. Only mature cows snow, that month. It has been trap- were chosen so that age could not ped in the vicinity of Greencastie in affect production and they were January'- It is not sought by fur milked at Purdue the same time as
While community siegi* a feature of the C< not rank in first place, headliner is to be a soioiS, Havens, wife of the law dent of Rotary InternaM
gatherers, but it often plays the host their lactation period at home. They consented to honor the for skunks and traps are set in the were not pampered in any way and with her presence and her
woodchuck burrows to catch the visi- exact records were kept of feed contors, not the owners of the subterran- sued and their production. In these traps thr The average of the five cows’ progroundhogs are occasionally caught action on the farms where they were The individuals that stir out so earlj kept the year previous was 5.063.8 do not roam around, apparently, but °Y rnilk and 202.9 lbs. of fat; in pass from one burrow to another. t ^ ie herd 8,662.2 lbs. of milk The woodchuck is the North Ameri- and 316 8 11>S - of fat - average can representative of the Marmot feed cost 0,1 th * farm wa * * 43 - 72 - in family The writer has seen the the Purdue herd * 7 2-36. American marmot, our groundhog, a ^ ve cost 0n tlj *
living in the Rocky mounuins above the timber line, where the snow would P**
tarians of the Tw«rtid|
who heard her a: the
Conference m St. Louis W|
know what a treat those who are in atten Twentieth District French Lick and West 1 A number of the club* their own organized
The return them, and th ly will
farm was the Conference. Among ■
in the Purdue herd $135.04. it is already known, ri*' average increase in feed cost are the Melody Singer*
t* ,-«d, d«p on th, slop,, in Febni- l" *" 0 ' ">”? >" ,he Pord J! ‘ 1 » IS
herd over that on the farm was 65 ley-Nutier-Neff
per cent The average increase in return above feed cost was 74 per cent, the average increase in milk production 71 per cent, and the average increase in fat production 56 per cent. Each cow showed propor-
tionate gains.
These cows were fed in the Pur-
due herd 65 per
ary for several months afterward as well. Along with his friend out there, the little black bear, he would sleep until the green would begin to show in vegetation, insuring food. He wouldn’t venture out to look at the
sun on February' 2, not he.
Speaking of weather prophets,
Mose Boone’s litle friend
Washington; an orgauii* 1 ! Vincennes and probab-1 1
Richmond.
In addition to the
there will be a number
sionals who will do
them will be Harry Bm*
his big accordian. ence in the Twentieth
the woolly due herd 65 per cent, or two-thirds ...
ague worm, was abroad in limited more feed than they had received hardly be complete numbers in the sunshine Sunday, and on the farm the previous year. Many will be with the Indian tha t evening a bat gyrated for a time farmers would not believe that their The Conference bal in one of the city churches. That cows could eat two-thirds more than be informal, will beI’fW!’ night .there was thunder and lightn- they were receiving, but these cows of the West Baden
ing and rain. XXX actually did.
— The first part of the cow’s ration CLT THIS OUT—IT IS WORTH undoubtedly goes for body mainten-
MON'EY ance she will not use her feed for
01 Tne 1 Thursday night. Febru**'
1 ^ e , nd _ t ^ s ad and ten cents to Fo- mi’k nroduction. Thesec ows and sgo, n.l,Siting yM^JlmVa^ad' thousands ,ike them in this state dress clearly. You will receive a are receiv i n ? rations only slightly ten cent bottle of FOLEY’ S HONEY’ lanter than maintenance rations , T -^ R COMPOUND for Coughs from which good production cannot
sample packatres be expected. It cost, m the Purdue herd, $360
to feed these five cows throught heir lactation period which averaged nine months. According to average figures
or FOLEY PILLS and FOLEY CATHARTIC TABLETS. Try these
wonderful remedies.
R- P- MULLINS, Druggist
tu, th, s and wk.
O’
HOW’S T# HALL’S CATAKjS *31 do whet we claim f of Catssgh or Dei*
Catarrh.
HALL'S CATARRH w „j|
sists of an Ointrof Rellevee the catarrh*. '
the Internal ^‘Xod o 8 J acts through the f low *
Surface*, thus assn'-™
mal conditions ,- 1 ro rt, „ I
Sold by drugx-rt*’"t F. 3. Cheney * ^,
OF#?]
ruggles
on these farms the owners could have Wed.. Feu.
