The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 June 1924 — Page 2

Page 2

Opera House

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1924.

1

A.. COCK Proprietor tJid Manager.

IflfflL NWS

Doors Open 6:30—Two Shows—Shows Start 7:00 Program Subject to Change Without Notice.

Saturday CHARLES JONES In the Big Special Feature ‘'Big Dan”

Aesop’s Film Fables Pathe News Weekly

1

NEW YORK

IS READY FOR

CONVENTION

Monday LON CHANEY In Maurice Tourneur’s Play “While Paris Sleeps"

“The Jungle Goddess” Episode Eight A Spectacular W ild Animal Serial

r=r“

We do Hemstitching and Picoting. Send by mail, also instructions. Mail orders given prompt attention. J. H. PITCHFORD.

OWEN MOORE in “THUNDERCATE”

It’s Cool

AT HIGH SCHOOL THEATRE TONIGHT ONLY

Admission 10c and 20c

7:00 and 8:30

THE DAILY BANNER Entered tn 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

“COLD IN THE HEAD” Is an acute attack of Nasal Catarrh Those subject to frequent “colds” art penerally In a "run down” condition. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE Is a Treatment consisting- of an Ointment, tc he used locally, and a Tonic, which acti Quickly through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces, building up the System, and making you less liable to "coldii.” Sold by druggists for over 40 Years. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O.

IN D1 AN A PO US LI V ESTOCK ..INDIANAPOLIS, June 21 — Hog prices were ,<teaily here today on dull week end market. The price range remained unchanged at 7.25 to $7.50. Buying was dull from the start. Few shipping orders the steadying faster of the week’s trading, were in evidence. Sows and pigs were steady. Rc ceipts numbered 5,000 including dOO holdovers. Hardly enough cattle were in the pens to establish a market. Fewer than 100 head were offered. The few transactions made were at steady quotations. A drop in buying interest caused a 50 cent decline in the calf division. Choice veals were quoted at $0.50 and hulk at $9 and down. Receipts were

200.

Lamb prices were steady at $12.50 j toda yarn! sheep quotations remained firm at $4.50. Receipts were 150.

Wiliam Crater, of this city, was in Indianap L Friday on business. Mrs. J. W. Foreman of Goshen i visiting W. W. Seller and family. Mrs. J. E. Sharp is somewhat Improved from her recent severe ill-

ness.

Mrs, W. A. Fox, Bloomington st, is somewhat improved in health at precent. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Zeis and daughter are spending the week-end in Lafayette. Miss Helen Phahler, of this city, left today for Muncie, where she will spend the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Asbury Manuel have returned from an auto business trip to Northern Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Rank of Louisville are here, called by the deatn of Mrs. Margaret Allen. Mrs. H. C. Lewis is at home from Knightstown where she has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Newby. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Stevens and son Bobby will live with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sharpe at the Dulin home this summer. Rev. H. C. Clippinger was called to Indianapolis yesterlay to conduct the funeral of a former parishoner, seventy-two years old . Rev. Arnold Cliff and wife, and Mrs. Albert Pi inz, of Jeffersonville, were visitors with Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Clippinger the last of this week. Harry E. Halla has purchased a building lot in Northwood just north of the new home of O. J. Larkin and will erect a new home on the lot within the near future. Prof. Frank Prukt of the Bainbridge high school is taking athletic work at the University of Illinois, at Champaign, during the summer

term.

Mrs. Will Paisley, who has been visiting her brother, Will Irvin and son Frank, since commencement, left Saturday afternoon for her home in Boston, Mass.

(Continued from Page 1)

street, the Avenue will blaze with orange colored lamps. Then there will be blue lamps an-i frosty white lamps for two and a half miles— the longest stretch of decorative lighting ever attempted. More than 25.000 globes will be used. Each block of Fifth Avenue will represent some state or territory. Every lamp post already is decorated with four flags: two American flags, the flag of New York Pity, and the

flag of the State.

Meantime, the “business men’’ who expect to net something more than pocket money from the sale of eatables, drinkables and souvenirs are

on hand in force.

Vendors line the streets and the bootleggers, so the report goes, may

be found other places.

For, although R. Q Merrick, in charge of federal prohibition enforcement, has announced the city will be very, very dry during the convention, those on the “inside” predict there will be plenty of firewater secretly on tap. Madison Square Garden, site of the convention proper has been ready for several days to receive the delegates following an extensive remodeling.

Sunday school—9:30 a. m. Preaching service—10:45 a m. Young People’s Meeting—6:^0 p. m. Evening service—7:30 p. rn. On next Monday night, the 23rd, will be children’s M i -ionary Program at 8 o’clock Come and help fill the house on Monday night, also come to our Sabbath services. Prayer meeting, Wednesday night at 7:30. Our prayer-meeting is booming; god attendance and fine meet-

ings.

Bible Class Friday night at 7:30. Announcement of our next Revival meeting will be made soon. ST. PAUL CATHOLIC CHURCH

Father V/alsh, pastor. First Mass, 7:00 a. m. Second' Mass, 9:00 o'clock. Christian Doctrine Class, 2:30 p. m Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, 3 p. m. There is only one mass on the last Sunday of the month at 8 o’clock.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Sunday morning service in the Ader block on the second floor at 10:45

o'clock.

Reading room opened Wednesday afternoon from two till four o’clock. Wednesday evening testimony ser-

vice at 7:45.

o

LOCUST STREET M. E. CHURCH

H. C. Clippinger, Minister.

Sunday school, 9:30, W. P. Sackett, superintendent, J. E. Courtney

CITIZENS TRUST CO.< THE HOVE OF THE SYSTEMATIC SAVER

FIRST NATIONAL BANK THE OLDEST BANK IN PUTNAM COUNTY

Delegates will be septed in the cen-!";j sharp,' assistants. Orches-

ter of the b.g builds. Alternates helps in music .

will be at one side of them. Members of the New York National Convention Committee and guests who obtain seats through the Democratic National Committee also will be seated on the main floor. The rest of the

crowd must use the bEiconies. For each 100 subscribed by New

Messrs Gordon and Edgar Prevo will spend the week-end with their parents in Terre Haute.

Leslie Sears, sheriff and Deputy Sheriff Dave Braden were in Cloverdale Friday on business.

BANNER WANT ADS PAY

'

I

Steady— Certain— Saving is the sure way to get money* It always brings results. Accounts paying com' pound interest can be ^ opened with this bank 3l for deposits of $1 or more. Central •• W HEKE MONEY. G KO W S”

Miss Jearnigan, who has been with the M. E. Children’s Homo the past nine months, has resigned to take a position with the Vacation Bible School at Buffalo, N. Y., and left Friday for the new field. Clemen Douglass was fined $10.85) for exceeding the speed limit in the corporation of Cloverdale one day last week. The arrest was the result of a resolution of the town board to discourage reckless driving through town, by enforcing speed limit law’s. We are informed that Town Marshal Tabor has been instructed to arrest all violators of the town ordinance pertaining to motor traffic, which not only prohibits fast driving but also prohibits operating a car with cut-out open. Barton Shipley states that the chewing gum vending machine at the corner of Walnut and Indiana streets which was robbed a few nights ago, contained only about 150 pennies when robbed, and that at no time do they contain any great sum of money. If all the gum in a full one was -old out, there would be about $6, but they are checked up often and no large amount of cash is left in them. The police are working on a clew to this robbery that may result in it being solved.

Help keep up

,our fine attendance.

| 10:40—Special service with the

Itinerant school as guests. Sermon by Rev. H. Mahoney of Terre Haute. Special music, M(|s. B. T. Riley, Director, Miss Helen Kendall, organist. Public cordially invited. 4 p. m.—Union Vesper service in

Yorkers for convention witertainment, College Avenue church, Dr. Paul one seat is given. Allotment of them Hutchinson of Chicago, speaker, however, will not take place until to-, 6 ; 30—Epworth League, morrow. 7:30—Children’s Day exercises by Hanging from beneath the balcon- the Sunday school. Baptism of chilies will be little platforms from which dren, if desired,

the photographers and moving picture

men do their work. I Visitors In the basement wll be telegraph vited.

instruments, telephone- and all the

Mrs Martin and daughter of St. Paul, Minn., all close relatives of the bride, Mrs. Alice Cogswell of Mansfield, Penna., mother of the groom, and Mrs. Edna Cogswell Otis of Greencastle, Indiana

WEDDING IS SOLEMNIZED

conveniences of their fcvn ‘city room’’

for newspapermen.

The radio is to be extensively used at this convention. Two companies will do all the broadcasting—the American Telegraph and Telephone Company and the New York Telephone Company, the latter a subsidiary of the former. They will send the program to 12 stations scattered

about the country. They are: WEAF and WJZ, New V>rk; WCAP and \ very beautiful wedding was sol-i WRC, Washington; VVGY, Schenec- emnized Thursday evening at the tady; WGR, Buffalo; KDKA, Pitts- ]lonie of M r . an ,i Mrs. L. Lee Merri- 1 burgh; WGN, WMAQ and WLS, Chi- 1656 Washington Boulevard,! cago; KDS, St. Louis and WDAF, Chicago, when their only daughter,! Kansas City. Eshter, was united in marriage to J. : The Hotel Association Committee Bryce Cogswell of Chicago. The vows i

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

“Men of Tomorrow” will be the 1

Public welcome to all our services, subject of discussion in the morn-j in the city cordially in- i np , pulpit message. In the evening,!

all young people of marriageable

o age or near it, as well as all par-

ents of such young people and young married people, will hear something that they ought to hear and ought to want to hear. “To Marry or Not

to Marry,’’ that is the question. Sunday school, 9:30 a. m.

Young People's meeting, 6:30 p.

m.

Messages of the pastor, 10:35 a.

BEAUTIFUL JUNE CEREMONY

AT CHICAGO. MRS. OTIS

WAS PRESENT

are

and 7:30 p. m. for everybody.

Both of them

Kitchen Needs Kitchen Cobineta Electric Ironera Breakfast Seta Electric Washer■ Kitchen Clocks Aluminum Ware Waterless Cookers Spice Jars Dishes Pastry Tables Kitchen Tables Kitchen Heaters Refrigerators Fry’s Oven Ware Glass E-Z Com Popper Grape Fruit Knives Paring Knives Steak Knives Butcher Knives Wooden Mixing Spoons

rooms available at prices varying from $2 to $8. New York hotel men

say they Won't profiteer.

Sunday Services

Fox Ridge community.

—0

MAPLE HEIGHTS MISSION Mrs. Grace Black, Pastor and Sunday school superintendent

Bible school, 2:30.

Preaching at 7:30 in her charge.

today announced that there still are were rea ,| by the Rev. Wilbur Car-' .^ nr<ilal,y lnvlted to the<p

rier, pastor of the 3rd Presbyterian . Church, in the presence of seventy-

five guests. ! Considerable damage was resulted j The house was a June bower of fr 0 * 11 the strong wind that passed over vari-colored iris, roses and banks of the city Friday evening. Limbs were palms and ferns. blown from trees in several parts of | The bride was radiant in a beauti- town and a telephone pole was blown ; ful gown of white crepe satin with ( lown near the Canning Factory. Panels of satin. Her veil was held in j John Goddard,“fire~Chief was a visskirt of Chantilly lace and cape and Ror at the Old Trail Park today. place with a hand of orange blossoms . — and she carried a shower bouquet of . °*? n ,, ' t this city, wa a viswhite roses and lilies-of-the-valley. ; ltnr ' n l n< h ana P°l> s on h ri lay. She was attended by Mrs. Howard — ." —r— —

Golden as Matron of Honor. Mrs.

The Kitchen Outfitting Co. i at the Gas Office I 1

jIUGHESTER S PILLS ■VA _ THE III MIOM) I1UAMI

THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Victor L. Rapheal, Minister.

Sunday School, 9:30

Morning Worship, 10:40, Rev. Jas. M. Eakins of Indianapolis will talk.

Christian Endeavor, 6:30

No evening service.

Woman’s Circle, 2:30 Wednesday Golden wore a gown of pink georgette

Tako »«» othrr. Huy of your ^ l>r:*r*Ini. Ask fnT<’iri-C'IIi:H.TFR • I>fAMOM> ISKANfft IMLI.H,! [J yttits kr. own as IJest, Safest. A1 w*> s K 1 i* r JOID BY DMGGISTS EVERYWHERE

U.S. AIRMEN REACH INDIA

INTREPID AMERICAN AMATORS ARE HALF WAY AROUND THE WORLD

RANGON .India, June 21—The American fliers are nearly half way around the world today and are about to meet and cross trails with their British competitor, Major A. S. C. MacLaren, who is proceeding in the opposite direction. After battling eastern gales over the bay of Bengali, Lieut. Lowell Smith and his companions, Lieuts. Leigh Wade and Eric Nelson, made perfect landings here Thursday, having flown from Avoy. They were enthusiastically received. At \kyab, where the Americans plan their next stop, is Major MacLaren, who has been kept from the air by the annual monsoon which make flying impossible This has now abated, wherefore MacLaren expect- to proceed to Rangoon. The Americans played ^ood luik in arriving just as the stanny season passed.

afternon in the church. Devotions by Miss Emma Jones; Mission topic— “Philippine Islands”, by Miss Grace Browning. Hostesses: Mrs. C. C. Gautier, Mrs. Ida H. Cooper and Mr-. Gertrude H. Werneke

COLLEGE AVE. M. E. CHURCH J. Emmett Porter, Pastor,

9:30 Sunday school.

crepe and carried a bouquet of pink roses. Mr. Cogswell was attended by Everett A. Thatcher as best man. A program of bridal songs was sung by Mrs. Edna Cogswell-Otis of Greencastle, a cousin of the groom. Mrs. Otis also played the wedding march. Following the ceremony, a recepi tion was held and a delicious lunch-

10:40 Morning Worship. ‘The eon was served, being carried out in World's Indispensables,” is the pa- the bridal color scheme of pink and

tor’s theme for the sermon. white.

4:00 Vesper service. The speaker Mr. and Mrs. Cogswell left Wed- ^ is Rev. Paul Hutchirtson, D. D., nesday evening for a honeymoon trip 1 Managing Editor of the Christian 1° the North Wools. Century. I Mrs. Cogswell is a very talented 6:30 Epworth League Devotional young woman, a graduate of Albion ' Hour. | College and Northwestern University | The community at large is invited and she is a meber of the Alpha Chi ! to hear Dr. Hutchinson at the four sorority. She has just completed o’clock hour. He is reckoned as onr four years teaching as Director of

of the keenest mifids Sous world of today.

CHRISTIAN CHURCH Levi Marshall, pastor. Sunday school at 9:30. Mrs. E. R Bartley, supt

Preaching at 10:10—subject “Social

of the relig . Dramatics in the LaGrange high j

school. Patrons of the Ray View As- j sembly will remember her as the di- 1 rector of many beautiful pageants !

given there.

Mr. Cogswell is a native of Pennsyl- ; v/.ia, a graduate of Mansfield Nor- , mal, attended Penn State college and the University of Pennsylvania. He

Claims Driving us to God.” _ . Evening service at 7:30—subject J was a first lieutenant with the Amer “The Coming Man.” Special music at j ican Expiditionary Force in France

in the World War and is now in busi-

ness n Chicago,

Mr. and Mrs. Cogswell will be at home to their mar friends after July 15, at 221 S. St. Louis Avenue. The out-off-town guests were: Mr. and Mrs. A. G Nixon and Mr. qnd Mrs C W Greet Albany .Oregon;

both services.

This will be the last evenings service before the union evening service^ begin. Let us have a good attendance.

NAZARENE CHURCH 317 E. Washington Street •Mrs. and Miss Jay, Pastors.

AS SUMMER ADVANCES We see items in all departments that do not move as fast as they should, and as it is our policy—“To make LOWER PRICES as we see an item needs it, rather than to wait and make a clearance all at once,” we are busy getting the stock down w here it must be for the Fall Merchandise, a little later. You will find lots of items at LOWER PRICES in ALL DEPARTMENTS—Dress Goods, Domestics, Ready-to-Wear, Hosiery, etc. Ruy your summer needs NOW and enjoy them while the weather is hot. ALLEN BROTHERS . ’ if' .y* $ “Money’s Worth or Money Back”