The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 April 1924 — Page 4

Page 4

the DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1924.

| Spring Suits 1 In the new shades—Blue-Gray, ! Powder Blue, Sand-Tan, Mouse, and Pastel at jS25, $30 and $35 Made by I STYLEPLUS and guaranteed to the wearer. Let us show you these—You ii be surprised. i S. C. Prevo & Sons 3' j3!3ESI2j3J3EISMSJSIS/E3JSEEI3ISI3J3J3MS0SISMSJ3!i?JSi5J3MSj3i , i

LOCAL MAN IS SUCCESSFUL i ! HOWARD HIGGINS HAS DEVELOPED DEBATE TEAM IN THE WEST

H. S. Notes

The baseball men will go on from their game this afternoon to one < with Bloomington here Friday afterFAMOUS "STONE AUTOGRAPH noon Their form is improving and ALBUM" OF NATIONAL MONU- Coach Rhea is expecting a good MENT IN NEW MEXICO. comeback.

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The Branding Iron," the college publication at the University of Wyoming, Laramie, in its issue of April 23, had a lengthy write up of a big chapel and holiday celebration enjoyed by the college as a result of its winning a large number of victories in various athletic and col-

lege activities.

The Branding Iron in commenting on the celebration said in part: “Talks by President Crane, Fred Parks, Coach Higgins, Coach McConnell, Jack and Jim Lynch and stunts by the winning teams, comprised one of the most interesting

assemblies of the year.

‘‘The assembly opened with President Crane introducing Coach Higgins of the debating team. The stunt which the debating team then presented was an original and highly amusing travesty on the system used by Wyoming in the use of faculty criticism in debate. The clever argument and the remarkably truthful portrayal of the eccentricities of the faculty members represented kept the large audience in a continual up-

roar.

i Jim Lynch introduced the Cowboy

Ii

By EDWARD B. CLARK The Dramatics Class under Wm. Washington. Up t° the presem O'Neil is doing some excellent work, time 29 national monuments Imve been The purpose of this work is not to established bj presidential proclaim!-1 ,^1^ ac t 0 rs and actresses for the ; = Hon. They are administered as pnft | s t a g e , but is for the purpose of giv-j of the national park system by the I>e ^ ^ stu ,| ent< an appreciation of i partment of the Interior through th. draniatics Thev have been 1 tnediumship of the national park . ' . ,, | service. These monuments preserve working on many plays of the very , for the people of the United States best type. Some of the plays that j historic and prehistoric structures and they have completed are ‘‘A Brok- i other ohj<*ots of historic and scientific en Engagement,'’ “First Aid to the j interest. ! Wounded,’’ and ‘‘The Pipers Pay." | The Interior department is issuing a Next Tuesday morning this class will : series of descriptive articles concern- pive a p rogram f or the chapel ex j

ing these national monuments. The erc j ses stories of the monuments seem in the.

main to liavi picturesque interest. | The regular weekly chapel was helV The El Jlcrro national monument, rnorning. Music, and plans for in western central New Mexico, con- Bovg , Week fille(1 the pro?ram< Mr. tains an e.o.rn.oas varic^red sand- presented, with a formal; stone rock rising about -IK) feet out , . . , re' of a lavn-stre.u, valley and eroded in *P eech - three instruments of fine such fantastic forms as to give It the quality, made by the Conn Company,! appearance ■ f a great castle. On Its to the High School for the High smooth faces arc the inscriptions of School Band. The instruments are i five of the early Spanish governors of fine pieces of work, silver plated j New Mexici well as of many In- w ith gold bells, and engraved. j • — • trepid padre- ad soldiers who were = J

'1

There was a double B Bass Tuba, circular Alto and a Baritone. Mr.

^uiuiiJiiiniiiiiiiimiiiiiimmiimiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiimiimimiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiB For Your Spring Housecleaning

among the first Europeans to visit this : part of the world. a

Lying as it did on the first highway Sloane will give the Baritone its in- . In New Mexici>, the Zuni-Aeomn trail, Rial workout tonight when he plays] this rock sheltered as u true fortress a number over the radio from WLAX many parties whose course took them for the boys’ week program. He will

^ D'ls way. The shape of the glaftt a ] s0 present one of his own com- . of cah of the wrestlers, he expressed m, ’" ollth ls ' l "' h n ' at Hn e M'" lli tion ot p OS j t j 0 ns which will he played by his '

soldiers could find protection within daufrhtori Edgarda .

matmen to the audience and after commenting upon the excellent work

Copyoghted B K «c Co*-— WHO DO YOU THINK GOT THE JOB’ On the bench in the ante room sat two young men—each about eighteen—and each waiting to see the office manager about a job One was a manly, well-dressed youth—the other’s habits sere revealed by his ill-fitting, badly-pressed suit, wrinkled tie and ungainly shoes. If you were office manager, experience and ability being eqml —which would you select for this job? Of course you would. IT PAYS TO DRESS WELL J. F. CANNON & COMPANY

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Let us send you one of the Famous ROYAL SUCTION VACUUM CLEANERS Guaranteed to clean your home easier and better than any other way. A demonstration of this wonderful cleaner will prove its merits. Buy before bouse cleaning and get the full benefit from it at once.

— it?

fohn Cock & Sons Co,

Phone 25

great hope’s for Wyoming’s continued success in boxing and wrestling. Coaches Jack and Jim Lynch have been largely responsible for the success achieved by Wyoming on the mat in the past year. Jim Lynch not only generously provided training quarters for the wrestling and boxing teams but spent a great deal i of money in putting the place in shape and also spent many hours with the men in getting them in con-

dition.”

Mr. Higgins is a son of Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Higgins of this city and is a graduate of DePamv with the class of 1922. The Messrs. Lynch named in the article are also well known here, being son-in-law and grandson of Mrs. W. P. Stoner, liv-

ing west of the city.

Sea =

ininniiniimuiMimiimiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiimimimimiiiimiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiii jiHinimimimiiiiiiiiiiimmmiimiiimiiiiiHimmimimiiimiiiHiiiiiiiiiiimmm | ^appa Kappa Gamma Spring Bazaar l I Rector Brothers, May 2 and 3 Useful things, such as trays, pillow cases, 1 | towels, fans, aprons, luncheon sets, favors f and baskets. = Fruit Market Saturday iiinimiiiiiiiiiiiimiimimmmmiiimimiimimmmmimmmHiiiimiiiimmmT

NOTICE— The committees and program for Decoration Day and •Memorial services are requested to

meet at Dr. Hawkins’ office Tuesday, April 29 at 7 o’clock. Order of Committee.

HIGH POINTS IN COL .iDGE CAREER Born on Vermont Farm, July 4, 1372. Attended public schools at Plymouth, Vt. Graduated from Amherst, 1895. Admitted to Sar at Northampton, Mass., 1897. Elected member of city council 1899. City solicitor of Northampton, Mass., 1900. State representative 1907. Mayor Northampton 1910. State senator 1912. President of state senate 1914-15. Lieutenant-Governor 1916-1918. Governor 1919-1920. Nominated for vice-president by Republican Convention June 12, 1920. Elected vice-president of United States Nov. 2. 1920. Became President of the Unlt<4 States August 3, 1S28.

was l::cl:;^h;''^;lcr 1 sn i ncc!'ss^y i ^! their dads in the High School gym the traveler in those days. Here with the use of a radio for a few out-gimnls on the one exposed the evening and will hear the proside no successful surprise attack gram from the local station. The could have I made by hostile In- hoys are expecting to have a whaling

dlans. big time tonight.

Onate’s Visit in 1606 Recorded. i The elections are over and the The earliest inscription on the rock council will soon name the school is that of Don Juan de Onate, gov- board, police officials and other of-

ernor and colonizer of New Mexico fi cers

and founder of the city of Santa Fe, „ . , , r. .. .

, , , . , . One of our local boys, a junior m i who in 1(100 on Ins return from a trip ,, , , , . . , ...^ to the head of the Gulf of California the Hl * h ^bool, is soon to exhibit 1 passed by K1 Murro and carved a rec- seven of his own oil paintings in ord of his visit. Greencastle. Gilbert Reeves, art edThe inscription of Gov. Manuel de Hor of the Ink Pot has seven landSilva Nieto, who succeeded Onate and scape views ready and will put them

who took Hit' first missionaries to on exhibition soon.

Hawiku where a mission was estub-, Special chape] was held today from lished, reads “I an. the captain-gen- 1 tQ 1;30 0 . clock Dr Dye> ‘ a re _

eral of the province of New Mexico , , . . , ,, .

, , , turned missionary from Africa, gave

! lor the kin;: our Lord. Passed by here , . . on return tn the towns of Zunl on a half hour talk 0,1 his «-x P erience s | the 29th i f July of the year 1G29 and which was very interesting. He has he put them in peace upon their peti- spent twenty-five years in that con-

tion, askin" him his favor as vassals tinent.

nf his ni l sty, and anew they gave

their obedience; all of which he did —o—

with clemency, zeal and prudence as I such miisi Christian (nut plain here) , most e\!ra' rdinary and gallant soldier ! of unending and praised memory.” i Tlie i':i accompanying Silva Nieto]

; was made up of -HKI cavalry and 10 i | wagons. This additional paragraph is! Thp Krent llon on tlle }!oU , of Water- ; added to ile inscription. 1 |(, 0 is reported in danger of collapse, j ‘ 1 hoy | i-sed on the 2.el of March j -pi,,, up„ a which it rests is in i of l(i32 yc.ir to the avenging of the | U j ns ] death of 1 ailier Lelrado.’’—Lujan ; The battlefield of more than a cenLujan, "i 1 iio signed tins inscription, | tury ago has been forgotten by most : tmd reference to this trip with otho; people in the rush to the new field of i soldiers from the garrison in Santa Ue ' glory. Where Napoleon and Wellingi to Hawiku, where the padre was tnut- -on contended does hoc concern the

When Ordering Groceries Say—WHITE LILY FLOUR and have the best

oooooooooo

HARRIS MILLING CO.

PLAIDS INVADE THE RANKS OF SPRING’S DAY-DRESS

t -- ,

LION CF WATERLOO T0PFLIN3 Glory of the Ck! C:ttlef'eld Ec ipsed by Events of t)ie World

War.

dered by Zuni Indians, who scalped | him February 22, 1632, just KMI years I before George Washington was born.

De Vargas Inscription.

: The De Vargas Inscription of 1i!02 is of historical importance. Translated It rends: “Here was the General i Don Diego de Vargas who conquered for our Holy Faith and Royal Crown

tourists who want to see where Foch and Hindenburg were making their fame. And Hie lion has lasted much longer than either the Corsican or the Englishman, neither of whom had another claim upon the attention of the world, observes the Fort Worth Telegru tn.

all of New Mexico at Ids own expense] The I 10 "* Shelley sang the requiem | year 1692.” Do Vargas reconquered a11 tlu ' K lor J - of might in the pic- i

m

ais

1OT33 r ,l m

m Kshd

dJsckson

Secretary of State

speak at the

COURT HOUSE

Tuesday Night

April Twenty-ninth

Eight O’clock

the Pueblo Indians after their bloody l,,rp o{ » crumbled statue half covered

rebellion in 16S0 and succeeded in bringing many colonists from Spain to | take up Iniiiies in tills country, lie lies I burled under the altar of the parish

j ••liurcli in Santa Fe.

Lieut. J. H. Simpson, afterward ieueral Simpson, aceompanied by the 1 artist. It. 11. Kern, were the first ; Americans to see these inscriptions j find bring them to the attention of the j public. They visited FI Morro and j copied tile inscriptions in 1849, leaving i i u record of their own visit on the rock.j j 'Ilie last Spanish inscription, of! ; which there are over fifty, was dated ] 177-1. Tims for 108 years El Morro i i was a regular camping place of pur-i | ties whose business it was to mnin-

wlth sand, bearing the inscription: "My name is Osvmandias. king ot

kings;

Look on my works, ye mighty and j

ilt spair;

Nothing beside remains. Of that colossal wrack, boundless and ’

bare,

The lone and levs sands stretch far away." The lion of Waterloo, the linn of military fame, rests on a foundation that crumbles witli time. Win patch it up?

,-A'

AGRICULTURE

|N SPITE of the tinini: for tailored ■I suits tlds spring, it is evident that

! day dresses will dispute their mi More than ten millions of our peo-j prentacy on the streets and elsewhere, pie are actively engaged In agricul Designers have been quick to see the ture. They comprise 2C.3 per cent of i possibilities, for dav dresses, of Hie

tain Spanish rule over the Pueblo In-] all Persons over ten years of age en new plaids, checks and stripes, in dif lians of tills section. Carving of, gaged in a gainful occupation. Our i ferent kinds „f cloth These give lames by present visitors is strictly , farms represent more than one-fourtl. them a wider Held In choice of fahHcs prohibited, with a heavy fine and I ° alll t ° t r al f n » tiona ! wealth The' than suits allow. The day dress has

year is 4( r 'I' 1,1 ''h 1 ’' ll l' ls in a i another advantage, these patterned manufactured products-and^ thi Z 1 ^e ter include manv finished items which ! ^ ' S ' ,itS ,lel ’ en UP ° n aC ‘ left the farm as raw material Tlm ty ] ?]‘' !,sor ‘‘f, for tourhps of ,lv ‘’ , - v one per cent of all our exports in 1921 | h,lt ‘ ,lal,ls an '> ‘n'roduce it, in terms of value, were food products i "T? pr ° per re8erve * ln the P,oth “• of the farm.-Walter W. Head. Presl ! Se „ , , , . , dent American Bankers Association 1 , ^ U “ ‘’leverly-cleslgned day ' dress of plaid material which hears R\Wi7r> \ " ! al1 tl,e marks of this season’s ideas. fcK CLASSIFIED ADS | It has an easy anil breezy Informality

] prisonment provided by law for viola- ] Hons, in order tluit the records of the ! most famous "Stone Autograph Album" j in the world may lie preserved. The monument contuins 240 acres and was first set aside in 1900. On the top of the rock there are some ruins of ancient dwellings which cun tie reached

by trail.

I The monument is reached from Gal lup, N. M., on the Santa Fe railroad j and National Old Trails mad. Westbound motorists, however, may leave { the highway at Grants and follow u I new road which goes through San

PAY

of style, an enviable simpl ' r an entirely new.tr itnn nt of sidf cry in three shaped tiers, ?! i 1 cues it from cummonplaee desk It looks to no outside help f° r 8

aiion, even the be plaid rut on the I

ruffs of entbroidi red hfti* , '‘ fin: l Hie neck anil s' , es " ll ' 1 series are shown in iiiiiiK‘ ns ' '* in Hie shops; those for wew

dresses of plain (doth

bright color intp'diiccil In or in applique and nn iUe"" rk ' Tlie street tint trii;iin"d " l ]“ like that in the l or li-r "f ' ^

u noteworthy iti'i" 111

Scnrf and hat tn \ : t af> her ’ i r they g<> in t! '''d 1 ' 111 ' 1 dress or the street suit. I® 1 case tlie scarf is llsua ^ ]. j

about Hie throat lik” 11

and tlie ends take tl." I 1 ']'' 1 ]; Tliey are partlculaily 1 '' , ' 1 ^ tliose suits in wldcli Hie 1 J fastened at the waist! n-' " r "

The most popular da) spring, so fur, is ».ad” J nel, usually in one of

or beige shades, barred J

or black. Plain mat

I,nr In color, is used fi»r

collars, cuffs and I'elu, ing the entire collar

cross liar Is not nlwu) yim —tilue, green and coral a ' . i

colors shown in the new

they make the P r ' n '’' . (or straight line frocks. - ^

row ribbon ties id 1 frocks are undecorated.

JULIA BOTTt "

(©, 1124, W.«t«rB ..

de at

blndiail

with the bulk moving between $6.60 tically all sales were nw INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK i and $6.75. Demand for pigs was $9.50, buyers finding no ^ INDIANAPOLIS, April 29—Large firm - T h e top was $7. getting much good ■‘ ;tock , eal . receipts of 13.000 caused hog prices | Cattle trading was only moderately 0nl y a few extra , C n h ° lCe ' to^drop L, cents here today. , active, but a downward trend, predict- able to con' mand $U . ^

Pli Kv- enmn I .1 X - CM — were steSOJ

j Rafael, one of Hie largest strictly 1 Hpunisli towns in Hie state, then skirts

* the foothills of Hie Zuni mountains _ ^ ^ ^

j and passes Agun Frla draw. From Practically all sales were made at' ed'"by ’some"traders Mondav'’f'iiWTn

there on the road Is through a grove $7.45, with some heavies selling ,1m,

of pines, Iwrdered on the left hand by to $7.40. Two nr tv, i t c i • • ' H°'d ers heifers experi a great rough Vava bed rising to nioun- 1 so i 1 o s o choice j lenced some difficulty in finding buy- | Ulna In places and falling Into un [*j nu , ir y at Sows con-, ers. Receipts were 1,200. ^nown dark er^lct* and canyons !n| 8t * ad y in the face of the gen-, Approximately 1,300 calves forced high mark at $17. Heavy Jflft ■ . .e — — M lr,e i^Hing down from $7,1 the market a half dollar lower. Prac- 1 at $6 to $8.

Sheep prices were

100 head offered for sale. ^ Jl5 lambs brought a top P r1 , ^ ^

sbe«P

tamns orougm. » --r • those of thp spring' aI ‘‘