The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 June 1924 — Page 2
Pa.sf3 2
THE DAILY BANNER, ORBENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, TUNE 13, 1924.
COOK GETS
House
A. COOK Proprietor Managfer.
Door? Open 6:30—Two Shows—Shows Start 7:00
Pro/?rain Subject to Change Without Notice.
Friday 7:00 p. m.—One Show Only MARY PICKFORI) In the Super Photoplay Tess of the Storm Country’
PEBSOi. UNO
[
William Fox Presents The Imperial Comedy “Up in the Air'’
■ Howard Dean v today on business.
in Cincinnati
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
A NEW GYM
Saturday TOM MIX In Zane Grey’s Photoplay “The Lone Star Ranger’ BATHE NEWS WEEKLY
Aesop's Film Fables
Peggy Joyce and Owen Moore in | “H E R T E M P O R A R Y H U S B A N D” 1 at the High School Theatre | E Toninht and Saturday Admission 10c, 20c =
NEW FASHION I FOR THE HAIR
Americans are agreeing with them The shingle is the thing! The last
word! Le Derniere Mot!
PARIS SAID LONG TIME AGO THAT IT SHOULD HE LONG AND SLEEK. OTHER VIEWS
Everyone from Grandma down to j the baby is getting a shingle. Grandma realizes that the Fiji Island efects of previous seasons were not for her, but the close-cropped shingle is
a different matter.
Robert Moody of this city was in Brazil today on business. Cecil Barnett of this city was in Brazil today on business. Sam R. Pursel spent Thursday in Indianapolis on business. Mr. A. Tezeiakis of New York City is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Louis Zaharkos of this city for several days. Mesdames W. F. Kennedy, I. M. Gott, C. M. Inge and J. E. Lloyd, of Russellville, were visitors here Thurs-
day.
Doctor Hawkins.has returned from a four days attendance at the Ameriican Medical Association meeting at Chicago. There will be preaching services at the Union Chapel Church Sunday evening at 7:30 o’clock conducted byMrs. Grace Black. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Thomas were in Terre Haute Friday and attended the graduating exercises of the high school in the evening. The W. R. C. No. 23 will meet at their hall Sunday afternoon at three o’clock to observe Memorial Day for their deceased members. Miss Emma Catherine Tincher, ol Louisville, has come to Greencastla to visit her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George McHaffie. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Pace and sons Harold and Max, of Heflin, Louisiana, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goodwine. Mrs. Pace is a sister of Mrs. Goodwine.
H. ASKEW PALMER CHIROPRACTOR
Over Banner Office
Office Phone 189
Res. 772-Y
SHORT CROP FORECAST
SMALLER ACREAGE VND LESS FAV() RABLE C< >SDITK)NS ARE RESPONSIBLE
D’PAUW ATHLETE STIRS UP OLD DANVILLE NORMAL AND THINGS HI V
And, strange to say, this is the first time that the .bob has ever actually approached its doom since com-
I ing into style.
NEW YQRK, June 13—The Parisians decided early in the Winter that hair should be long and sleek ami drawn tightly behind the ears
was to be ‘chic.” ,. , ,
_ I ing out, but it duln t go out. It came “Eyes,” wrote a Parisian connois- i n with a bang! A real bang on the seur of feminine beauty, “are not the! forehea.l! But the very preponder- j ^ abst
if one i People have been sayI ing for years that short hair was go-
King, Morrison, Foster Company report having sold 126 cars here since the beginning of the year, an average of about 25 cars per month.
—Cloverdale Graphic.
Mrs. J. O. Cammack and Miss Eleanore left today for Tazewell, Va., to spend the summer with Mrs. G. A. abPst and other relatives. Mr*.
s formerly Miss Eileen
Parisian's only claim to beauty. The a nce with which it has entered in the shell-pink ear is quite as fascinating j fashion world might mark its doom, as the eye.” j Over-popularity might hasten its de-
American girls are often rather slow about accepting the Parisians verdict on beauty. They will accept their silhouette, their hats and their shoes without a moment’s hesitation, but when it come to accepting their palor, their darkened eyelids, their oars or their hair-does! Gracious! That is something to ponder over! The American girls were quite willing to give their Parisian sisters an “eye” for an “eye,” but when it came to giving them an “ear” for an “ear”—well, that was a different mat-
ter.
And as for long, sleek hair! Never! “The bob is (lead! Vile la long hair!” shouted the Parisian. But the Americans refused to believe that the bob was dead, or if it was dead, they refused to let the dead rest. They clipped and cut an 1 curled and permanently waved in spite of the bob’s dt».nise. And now, the Parisians are revers-
mise. At any rate, we won’t write the obituaries of the bob until the time for obituaries are due. The bob is the livest thing alive today—everybody is cutting, clipping. Certain families have enough clipped hair about the house to start a hair watch chain factory. The second-hand man is knocking in our doors, asking:
Cammack.
Rhodes Blackstock and Theodore Edmunson, who received sentences in the Putnam Circuit CouVt on Tuesday were taken to the State Reformatory at Pendleton on Thursday by John Hamm and Dave Braden.
A smaller crop of wheat this year than produced last year has been forecast by the department of agriculture in its report of June 1 crop conditions. Smaller acreage of both winter and sitring wheats and less favorable conditions than last year’s
are responsible.
A total wheat crop of 693,000,000 bushels this year was forecast. Thq spring w.heat crop, for’ which the first forecast of the season was announced, was placed at 184,000,000 bushels, the area planted being estimated at 16,920,000 acres or 90.1 per cent of last year's acreage. Winter wheat production was foreast at 509,000,000 bushels compared with a forecast of 533,013,000 bushels a month ago. 1 First production forecasts for the season of other crops are: Oats, 1,232,000,000 bushels; Barley, 160,000. 000 bushels; Rye, 62,500,000 bushels, and Peaches, 52,500,000 bushels. The condition of the crops on June 1, from which the production forecast was computed, was: Winter wheat, 74 per cent of normal; spring wheat, 82.3: fall wheat. 76; oats, 83; barley, 79.5; rye, 87.4 hay, 83; pastures, 82.2; apples, 74: and peaches,
72.7.
The total wheat acreage, combining winter and sprintr wheat acreage is 53.818,000 acres tl.s year or 92.3 per cent of the combined acreage last year. The acreage of oats is 41,625,000 acres, or 95.9 per cent of
last year.
The condition of winter wheat on June 1 in Indiana was 77 per cent of normal. Production in the state forecast at 26.657,000 bushels.
was
A DePauw athlete. Russell Cook, has stirred things up at Danville Normal and as a result of the success he attained there his first year, the Normal and the town are to have a splendid new gymnasium, one of the largest in the state amj^it is the plan now to nave it ready for use this fall. The Danville Republican says: Ground will be broken, Tuesday morning for a real gymnasium in
Danville. Construction will follow
immediately, and it is hoped to have
the gymnasium finished by fall. All
of the rough labor for the construc-
tion has been donated by the students, and the tile was purchased about a year ago . The playing floor in the j gym will be 50x90, the maximum col- ; lege size, and the seating capacity ' more than 2,000, with a possibility ! of a thousand more for other occa- ;
sions.
The gymnasium will be build just : back of the old building, on North \ Wayne street ;and just across from I the chaple. A natural depression in | the ground makes the construction | much easier, as but little excavation will be necessary. The gym will have the self-supporting roof, so that there will be no obstructions, either in the playing, or for the spectators. The outside dimensions will be 80x120 feet. With the playing floor of 50x90, this will leave 15 feet on each side for the spectators. Slanting bleachers will be built in here. There will be shower and dressing rooms for both boys’ and girls’ teams. These will be either under the bleachers or beneath the floor. The building will run east and west and will face on North Wayne street. It will be of hollow tile, 5x12x3. This will make the structure warm in the winter and cool in the summer time. In the construction there will be little more than the four walls, floor and
ceiling.
As is the case in Franklin, there might be a possibility of the one gymnasium serving both the high school and college. There, two high schools Hopewell and Franklin, and Franklin college, use the one large gymnasium. With the talk of remodeling the present gym used by the high school, for a parsonage, this may be necessary. Many believe that it would be as well for the town to pay the several hundred dollars a year to the college as anywhere else, and also have a good floor. | ! The year’s record in athletics for | in
It is the fixed policy of this institution, by keeping closely in touch with its customers, to assist them in all financial matters where cooperation or suggestion or advice is needed or wanted. Aiding you to get important matters cleaned up quickly, we enable you to push ahead your sales, or your production . We’ll gladly explain the many-sided service we offer you—a letter or phone call will bring a representative.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK THE OLDEST BANK IN PUTNAM COUNTY
• CITIZENS TRUST CO.* THE HOME OF THE SYSTEMATIC SAVER
OOOOOCOOOOOOOOOCXXXXJOOCXXXXXXXXXXXXXDOOCOOOOOCXDOOCCxDO Saturday Cash Neat Specials Fresh Boiling Beef, lb 10c Fresh Brains, lb 10c Sugar Cured Bacon Squares, lb 12 1 / 2 c Sugar Cured Picnic Hams, lb 15c Sugar Cured Bacon, (half or whole), lb 15c Fresh Sausage, lb 15c Fresh Pork Shoulders (whole) lb 15c Pure Home Made Lard, lb 15c Sugar Cured Smoked Hams, lb 23c Breakfast bacon, machine sliced (no rind or waste) 25c PHONE 12 WE DELIVER
W. H. El TEL JORGE
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WOMAN IS FINED
The fire department was called to the Pennsylvania Restaurant at about 9:30 o’clock Thursday evening. Some gasoline had been spilled on the
“Any old clothes, shoes, hair?” And Rr0 und around a tank and in some the scissors sharpener says, “Sci-j way j ia( j become ignited. No dam-
age was resulted.
sors to grind?” whenever he sees a woman on the street. Hob-haired j bandits are the latest menace about New York, and the police peek under every woman’s hat seeking for the
bold, bad, bobbed bandit.
If you’d fit in fashion’s jingle, j
Go at once and get a rhing'.e.
~o
WHEAT POOI PLANS
INDIANAPOLIS, June 13.—Plans for the operation of the Indiana
ing their opinions. Not only are they j wheat pool wne tak:n up today ::i returning to the hob, but to the man- a meeting of the f.tate cxe:ulivc cemnish hair-cut, the shingle. And the m'ttee in charge of the pool.
Wallace Holcomb, Sin.mie Sayers and Die!: Taylor of this city are entered in the golf tournament now ! underway in Indianapolis. “Charles, j “Chich’ ’Evans, tne of the best known j figures in golfing circles and former 1 champion, is entered the tourney. Mr. and Mrs. Albert N. Thrush, of Garrett, Ind., have announced the marriage of their daughter Marion to Frank \V. Weathers on June 1, 192-1. Mr. and Mrs. Weathers are l) >th graduates of DePauw and are
well Known Imre
ELECTRIC CO. WINS ITS SUIT
Mrs. Jeanette Thornburg, when (brought before Mayor Charles Zer.* city court Frida afternoon charged
the Central Normal College has been 'with intoxication, pleaded guilty and the brightest in the career of the was fined $1 and costs, school. Two state championships in j She was arrested about 9 o’clock the Junior conference have been won (Friday morning by Marshal Henry
—in basketball and in baseball. I be 1 O Hair.
, teams have been under the coaching INDIANAPOLIS COURT GRANTS of Coach Russell Cook. Most of both PERMISSION TO CROSS of the teams will probably return to TRACTION LINES ! school next year and if the return of i Coach Cook could be assured, with the ivnr i v a pht r« i 10 T . ' new gymnasium, prospects for next INI IANA10LTS, June 12 Tilt ^ ear wou ],| ]j e even greater. Through Indiana Eletric Corporation today was a thletics the school wins much granted the right to enter the Indian- advertisement, and is a great drawing apolis field when Judge Hay in super- card for new T students to attend the ior court authorized the company, college in the winter terms, when the
attendance is usually the lowest.
Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Burnside spent the day in Indianapolis.
dainty luncheon or a wholesome, wellprepared dinner. The cafeteria, started this year under the management of Miss Mabel Kersey, is a new feature of summer school and is proving very popular both within the university and the town.
SUMMER SCHOOL NOTES
By their tickets you may know them! Not only DePauw students but many townspeople are carrying
Convocation this morning took the form of a community sing. Student and faculty joined in singing many o' the old airs and a few of the more recent numbers. This will be the feature of the Friday convocation every week.
The entire student body and faculty will gather at Mansfield Hall tomorrow evening when they will be guests
through the right of eminent domain, to cross the right of w ay of the Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern traction company with high tension lines. The order ended a long legal battle (in w'hieh the Electric corporation, ' which has a large power plant in Terre Haute, sought to cross the trac tion lines to enter Indianapolis.
A RRANGEMENTS can be ntatlc to store /jL silverware and other valuables in our vault during your absence on vacation. Space to suit your requirements. Otir charge for this service is me derate.
Central
Truct
.Company
“WHERE MONEY GROWS”
Local radio fans “listened in” on the proceedings at the Republican Nation: 1 Convention at Cleveland last night and heard General Dawes nominate 1 for vice president. The news of his nomina'icn was known here as quick as it was in Cleveland itself due to the wireless. The funeral of Miss Lois Oliver, who died at the County Hospital Thursday morning at ten o’clock, will be held Saturday afternoon at 2:00 ! o’clock at the Fillmore Methodist j church. Prof. H. B. Gough will have i charge of the services. Interment 1 will be in the Fillmore cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Crawley, j Mr. and Mrs. George Blake, Mr. and Yrs. Oscar Blue, Mr. and Mrs. Guy j Riggs, Mr. f.nd Mrs. Marion Hinkle, Mrs. Carl Twigg, Mrs. Fred Allen, Mts. Sandifur, Mrs. Watkins, Mrs. | McCullough, Miss Edith Larue, Leon- ! dis McNeeley, Earl Terry and B. Cnver attended a meeting of Peoria Council No. 64, Degree of Pocahontas at Brazil last evening. There was initiation of candidates, the work was exemplified by the Brazil degree staff. There were visitors from ' Bloomington, Knightsville, Harmony ! and Staunton. After the business i session, refreshments were served j Music furnished by the Brazil or chestra.
TO NOMINATE RALSTON
INDIANAPOLIS, June 13—Freder-
ick Van Nuys will place the name of Samuel Ralston in nomination in the Democratic free-for-all presidential race at the national convention in New York it was indicated here today.
Indiana’s delegation of thirty-four
will cast its vote solidly for Ralston.
Van Nuys was keynote speaker at the Indiana state convention. Ralston will not attend the convention but remain at his home here.
balanced, so smooth in action JMr* it actually im- Jj proves your penraansnip marvelous * .DUNn-peN. T1i« f'ounUitn P*» “iUi il.- Utile R*1 Pu!*p-U**dUi | — $ 2Z3 and up
the little yellow tickets of the Uni-1 at Open House given by the resident-
jversity Cafeteria tucked away in 1 of the hall. A novel entertainment , v , - , " | ivFSTOCK (some handy place. You mar see j wj] replace the usual formality n'I | t.-Ym wYpm iV Hmc 13 vi OB .! them dropping into the little eating I at the regular fall open house held 'pr!r ^.v«^15c e m S o„ ^ . n e place opposite E„« Codes* ^ t „- a *oo, y ,«r.
dianapolisx livestock exchange today due to light receipts of 7,000 and a slight strengthening of shipping de-
mands.
I The unturn carried choice ami , heavy-weight hogs up to $7.40, while ; bulk of sales was at $7.20 to $7.30. ! Pigs were up a quester at $6.75 ! and down and sows were higher at $6.75 down. Cattle trading was listless with prices generally steady with Thursday’s close. Butcher stuff showed a tendency to sell lower. Good to choice steers were movin gat $10 to $10.50. Receipts were 500. With buying holding up good from the start, due largely to shipping orders, the calf market showed marked firmness and an early clearance was affected. Choice offerings were 50 cents higher at $11.50. ther classes held steady. Receipts were 800. Lamb prices took another drop of 50 cents to a top of $15 as the annual | adjustment in grading sheep was j made . Spring lambs went into the 1 wool lamb class and yearlings went into the aged sheep class. Receipts' were 200.
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