The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 June 1924 — Page 2
Pagre 2
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1924.
Opera House
A.. COOK Proprietor hud Manager. Doors Open G:30—Two Shows—Shows Start 7:00
Projfrara Subject to Change Without Notice.
Tuesday Henri Berger Presents “Milady”
A Great Production of Romance SID SMITH In His Own Comedy
“My Master’
Wednesday PETE MORRISON In the Thrilling Play “Dangerous Love’ ’
GALE HENRY The Elongated Comedienne in “The Poor Fish”
Those ceilings which have become crimy or stained, the white plaster walls that have lost their look of newness, the room with the torn wall paper; all these may be easily corrected. Proper preparation, a few directions; MUULSCO and that charm of cleanliness and beauty is yours. Call at our store and we will be glad to tell you about j\] URESCO and to help you in the proper selection of colors, etc.
Mullins Drug Store Benjamin Moore CTCo. Paint?,,Varnishes and Muresco
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TORONTO
Banner Want Ads Bring Results
On Your Vacation Leave Worry Behind
A Safe Deposit Box in our vault costs only a few cents a week. Special arrangements for storing silverware and bulky articles. Our charge for this service is moderate.
CentralcJs, “WHERE MONEY GROWS"
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LOCI NEWS
PEEV0& THOMAS FUNERAL DIRECTORS Ambulance Service Phones — Office 305, Res. 93
Wesley Smalley, of Indianapolis, was here today on business. Mrs. Susie Fay, of Urbana, Illinois, is attending the Kappa Opening this week. Mi - Mildred Cloyd of Danville, 111., is a commencement visitor at DePauw. Raymond Buchannan, of Indianapolis ,is visiting friends in this city for several days. Daily M. Hudler, owner of the Xoblesville Morning Times, was in town on business today. Marold Sinclair, of New York is here visiting at the Phi Psi house during commencement. Roy Aubrey, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Aubrey, was a visitor in Indianapolis on Monday. Clifford Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Drew Miller was in Indianapolis Monday on business. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith of Indianapolis are visiting friends and relatives in this city. Eugene Chenoweth, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Chenoweth, is visiting relatives in Martinsville for several days. Elmer Wells has returned to Indianapolis after spending several days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Wells.
THE DAILY BANNER Entered In the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as second class mail matter. HARRY M. SMITH Editor and Proprietor S. R. RARIDEN, City Editor
H. ASKEW PALMER CHIROPRACTOR Over Banner Office Office Phone 189 Res. 772-Y
OTTO F. LAKIN
FUNERAL DIRECTOR PRIVATE CHAPEL AMBULANCE SERVICE
Washington St. & Spring Ave Phone 815
NOTICES OF LOCAL LODGE MEETINGS
TO WORK WITH CHAUTAUQUA
Miss Gladys Carson of Spartanburg, North Carolina, is a commencement guest of Prof, and Mrs. W. W.
Carson.
Francis Lane, a son of Mr. and Mrs F. H. Lane, of Bainbridge, and a student of DePauw University the past year, has been employed by the Community Chautauqua System for this season. He has been assigned to the Paramount division, which makes the larger cities of northern Ohio and Indiana and the Lake Resorts of Michigan during the month of August. He left today for Fort Discovery, Ohio, where they begin their season’s work this month. o A YOUNG INDIANA BOTANIST’S COLLECTION
Indianapolis, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Miller, 529 East
Anderson street.
Death as the result of overseas service robbed Indiana of a most promising young naturalist, Earl Jerome
Ehvood Watson, of Indianapolis and ^ r * rnes ’ a rnern ^ )er Indiana graduate of DePauw University, is in i Academy of Science, who, at the age this city for the commencement ex-1 eighteen years, had rol ecte< an< ercises : scientifically named over 900 plants
1 representing every species of weed,
Mrs. Hamilton Knox and Mrs. M. flower, grass, fern, shrub and tree in Hostetter of Washington, D. C. are Putnam county, Indiana, guests during commencement at the' Born in Russellville, Indiana, this Kappa house. Hoosier l&d received his early educaMr. and Mrs. Frank W. Woods, of tion ther f’ an ' , in H ! B K h f? 00 * T*
aided and encaouraged by the present State Forester. C. C. Dean, who was teaching botany at that time. During the years 1PI0-1911 the specimens
The children of Christian Sunday collected and pressed, but in 1912 the School will me?t to practice for chil- work was discontinued, when Grimes dren's day exercises Wednesday ai became a member of the Indiana Soil ternoon at 2:30. Survey.
After his death, which occurred in 1921, while he was Associate Professor of Botany in the College of William and Mary, in Virginia, his wife, Mrs. Eileen Whitehead Erlanson, a botanist of the University of Michigan, prepared a paper for the Indiana Academy of Science, which has just been published in the Proceedings of that society. She gives a list of the plants and the places where they had been found ,thus making available to others interested in Indiana wild flowers and trees, this useful information. The specimens of this collection have been presented by Mrs. Erlandon (formerly Mrs. Grimes) to the Botany Department of DePauw University at Greencastle, Indiana.
Dr. Charles H. Adams, who has been the guest'of Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Brown, has returned to his
home in Chicago.
Enich Watson, of Indianapolis and graduate of DePauw University, is in this city today to attend the com-
mencement exercises.
Miss Mary Manual and Miss Gertrude Cook who have been attending school at Oxford, Ohio, are at home
for the summer vacation.
Paul Hill of Indianapolis was a visitor in the city on Tuesday. Mr.; Hill is a former resident of Greencas-'
tie and is well known here.
Dr. W. II. Astell of Bellingham, ? Washington, class of 1889 and a! member of the Phi Psi is visiting! friends here during commencement, j The Thursday Reading Club will ’ meet with Mrs. Raymond Fisher on Beveridge street Thursday afternoon! at 2:30, Please note change of meet-
! ing.
! Mr. and Mrs. Donald Maxwell, of' .' Chicago, are here for the DePauw Commencement exercises. Mr. Maxwell is on the copy desk of the Chicago Tribune. Miss Helen Purcell, of Vincennes, | graduate from DePauw in ’23, is here I for commencement and is a guest at the Alpha Chi house. Miss Purcell will leave Montreal, Canada, on June 28, for a ten weeks tour of Europe. Miss Reggie Daniel will leave Thursday for Seattle, Wash., where she will spend the summer with her sister, Miss Ethel Daniel. While there Miss Daniel will take a course in music and art in the University of Washington. The city council will hold a special meeting this evening at 7:00 o'clock to act upon the petition of A. J. Duff. A tract of land, Villa South, owned by Mr. Duff, who has petitioned for annexation to the city, will be acted upon at the meeting. Principal Buesenburg will be in his office at the high school building on Thursday morning from 8 until 11 o’clock to help students prepare their (schedules for the summer school I work. Both the grade and high school 1 work will be carried on in the high i school building during the summer j term, Mr. Buesenburg announced. Classes will meet each morning from 7 until 11 o’clock.
CHRISTIAN CHURCH NOTES
The choir will meet at the church Wednesday evening at 7 o’clock. The Sunday school teachers will meet at the church Thursday evening at 7:30. The official board will meet Friday evening at 7:30 at the church.
A REVOLUTION STARTED
Dispatches State That Rebels are Attempting to Overthrow the Present Government in Tiny Country
ATHENS, June 3.—Unconfirmed dispatches from Albania declare that Tirana, the capital is about to fall into the hands of revolutionists. Athens, rumor factory of the Balkans, has received varied reports of progress of an uprising in Albania during the past 48 hours. The reports seem to emanate from rebel sources. Apparently some form of revolution has been attempted, aimed against Tirana and Durazze. One report said the American minister to Albania had been asked to leave the country, his offense being that he had sought intervention by the League of Nations. The report did not say who had made the request. One of the first rumors in the wake of every Balkan uprising is concerned with a slight or insult to the American minister, the purpose of spreading the report being to enlist sympathy of the United States with the side opposite to that accused of he atrocity. An example of the reports is the following: “Eight hundred fugitives arrived at Bari.’’ The occasion for their being fugitives and whence they came is not mentioned. o ATHLETES GET THEIR AWARDS
!MtiS3ri3J3fE r ivOI315ISI5M3ISEEJ3IBI5I3 Kitchen Needs Kitchen Cabinet* Electric Ironera Breakfast Seta Electric Waahera Kitchen Clock* Aluminum War* Waterless Cookera Spice Jara Dishes Pastry Tablea Kitchen Tables Kitchen Heaters Refrigerators Fry’s Oven Ware Glaaa E-Z Com Popper Grape Fruit Knives Paring Knives Steak Knives Butcher Knives Wooden Mixing Spoons The Kitchen Outfitting Co. at the Gas Office
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The following members of the DePauw athletic teams have received awards: Varsity Baseball Awards Fred L. Davis Charles M. Dragoo Joseph L. Beesley Austin R. Pruitt Gilbert Darnell John L. Clark. Wilbur C. Clippinger James H. Vandenbark Raymond F. Struck Roger J. Pierson Lowell J. Nutland Frederick I. Johnson Gregory Stilwagon Freshman Baseball Awards R. H. Larimer Hugh M. Earl Cleon C. Steward Herbert V. Morris Herndon Irwin Cecil B. Sonner Gerald W. Eryeart George Orerscan Merrill B. McFall Ralph P. Gould W. J. Nusbaum Walter A. Krick Richard N. Sturtridge Varsity Track Awards Paul W. Jones Glenn Smith Glenn M. Adams Paul Meyers Noel D. Stafford Donald M. Zeis Richard M. Wilcox C. D. Hunter Raymond L. Nicholson Earl E. Morton Walter P. Heinzman Thomas B. Fortune Audrey a. Wills Freshman Track Awards L. Carter J. Puckett R. Sturtridge John Canaday George Wheeler K. II. Larimer
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Greencastle lodge No. 504, K. of P. will meet Thursday evening at :30 o’clock. All members are urged to be present. Visiting brothers are always welcome. Lee McNeely, K. R. S.
6 0 T H YEAR IN BUSI Ne sTW
on Y Security
HAYMAKERS MEET The Haymakers lodge will meet Friday evening at 7:30 o’clock at the lodge headquarters, the work will be conferred upon several candidates. All members are requested to be present.
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EASTERN STAR Greencastle chapter No. 255 O.E.S. will meet in regular session Wednesday evening at 8 o’clock. There will be initiation. Worthy Matron, Olie Brown. Secy, Sarah R. Wright. o REPORTS OF MORE TROUBLE IN BALKANS
MANY RUMORS REACH ATHENS OF UNREST IN ALBANIAN CAPITAL
Bad Weather And Poor Roads—
needn’t keep you from paying your bills by check or making deposits in this strong, friendly bank when you have a Checking Account. Pay your bills by mail. If you haven’t a Checking Account here now, just send us your next remittance and we will open one for you. $1.00 Opens a Checking Account $1.00
FIRST NATIONAL BANK THE OLDEST BANK IN PUTNAM COUNTY
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'CITIZENS TRUST CO.. THE HOME OF THE SYSTEMATIC SAVER
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D. A. Grant R. S. Hall J. R. Kotlar
NEW TESTIMONY
SHELBYYTLLE, Ind., June 3.— Testimony intended to show that Charles Henry, colored was at his home each night during the month the fatal shooting of Jesse Louden, Indianapolis policeman occurred, was introduced at Henry’s trial for the murder today. Further rebuttal testimony that Henry was insane at the time his alleged confession was made to detectives whom he charges used “third degree methods to obtain was also
introduced.
Attorneys for Henry expect to show that he has been of unsound mind since he was gassed in France with the American army. o SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENTION
Miss Edmon C. Stewart. Duet, Antioch school. Reports from Sunday Schools.
Song, Convention.
4:00 Benediction, Rev. V. L. Raphael
Margaret Donald, Pres Helen Lewis, Sec.
NOTICE ; Students who wish to study piano with Miss Rutledge during the Summer school may call at Room 3, Mu- , sic Hall between 3 and 5 o’clock for registration. Ip
SOME RHUBARB
The Washington township Sunday school convention will be held in the Antioch church, Sunday, June 8, 1924, beginning at 2 o’clock. The following program will be given: Song of the Convention. Devotional Service, Mrs. David Houck Song, Manhattan school. Address, Rev. V. L. Raphael. Song, Reelsville school. Address, Prof. L. E. Mitchell. Song, Croy’s Creek school. Recess Song, Convention. Solo, Antioch school. Address, “Young People’s Work,” Mr. Claude York. Song, Big Walnut school. Address, “Adults in Sunday School,"
Claud Wimmer, a farmer of Monroe township, is the champion rhubarb] grower of Putnam county, according to all reports. A few days ago, he was inspecting his garden when be found a mammoth bunch of rhubarb He thought the leaves were extnj large and after finding an extra Ion? yard stick he measured two of tie largest leaves and found them exactly 30 inches across, and he says tkeTj were not stretched or smoothed oat at that. Had they been, he probably would have had to stretch the yari stick with which the leaves were me* sured.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS John Toney to Roy Buis et ai lot in Greencastle, $800. Northwood Dev. Co., to Cora Ep-, person et al, 248 acres in Franklin] twp., $1. John A. Bence to F. M. Logit., lot in Boone Hutcheson c emetery,] $2.50. j Walter W. Keller, Admr., to wwW Dcrs’tt, land in Jefferson tp. $
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You Can Let It RAIN And NOT Get Wet if You Have Secured 0n< Of Our PARASOLS Beautiful new styles in Silk—Silk Mixtures and Cotton Parasols and a very REASONABLE PRICES Japanese Parasols For either rain or s"" 50c and Up ALLEN BROS. “Money's Worth or Money ^ 7i|||iiiiiitiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiii |,lll,,IIM!lllfl1
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