The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 June 1924 — Page 2
Page
Opera House
THE DAILY BANNER, GREEN CASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1924.
A. COOK Proprietor t*nd Manager. Doors Open 6:30—Two Shows—Shows Start 7:00
Program Subject to Change Without Notice.
Tuesday
A. I». Barringer’s Sensational Under Sea Production “Vengeance of the Deep
EVANSVILLE WOMAN DIES HKRE TUESDAY
I
.Mr Asa Smith is visiting relatives and friends at Vincennes for a week.
SID SMITH
In His Own Comedy A Tailor Made Chauffem”
Wednesday
LAURETTE TAYLOR In the Metro Super Play
‘‘Happiness ’
Prominent Instructor in Evansville Schools Died at Home of Mother
on Bloomington Street
Mack Sennett Presents
His Latest Comedy “Flip Flops”
H. ASKEW PALMER CHIROPRACTOR Over Banner Office Office Phone 189 Res. 772-Y OTTO F. LAKIN
Ernest Collins, of Cloverdale, was i a visitor in the city on Tuesday morningWill E. Jones and Albert Carmicheal motored to Spencer on Monday afternoon. Miss Jane Farmer is attending the State Sunday School Convention at Michigan City. Winfield Scott, of Niles, Ohio, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Charles Watson and family, Born on Monday, June 23, to Mr. and Mrs. Jess Hoffman of Clinton township, a son. Miss Gladys Rogers of this city is visiting friends and relatives in' Crawfordville today. The Martha Washington club will meet Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 with Mrs. Esta Sweet. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Case and son of Danville spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Watson and fam-
ily.
Mrs. James Merryweather left SatTHE DAILY BANNER urday for Prescott, Arizona, for a Entered in the Post Office at Green- ; v j s jt with her daughter, Mrs. George castle, Indiana, as second class mail Domitiovich. matter.
Mrs* Harry D. Emerick. age 37, years, died at the home of her mother. Mrs* L. F. Cooper, 433 south Blomington street Tuesday morning at 9:30 o'clock. Death'was due to urenic poisoning. v Mrs. Emerick was a prominent teacher in the Evansville schools and during the past year occupied the position of instructor of Spanish in the Evansville High School- School being closed for the summer vacation Mrs. Emerick came to this city to visit her mother an don Monday morning was confined to bed. suffering from convulsions- Her condition was serious up to the time of her death Tuesday
morning,
She is survived by the husband, her mother Mrs- L- F. Cooper of this city; one son Emmett, five years of age, and three brothers, Adalbert, Naaman and Manson Cooper
HARRY M. SMITH Editor and Proprietor S. R* RAKIDEN, City Editor
FUNERAL DIRECTOR PRIVATE CHAPEL AMBULANCE SERVICE
Washington St. & Spring Ave Phone 815
Greencastle Lodge No. 564, K. of P. will meet this evening at 7:3G o’clock. All members note c+iange of meeting night.
, , W. F. M. S. of Locust Street church and family spent Sunday at T* J. win meet with Mrs . . Geofffe White .s i.ic < oid. I Howard street Wednesday afterMr. and Mrs. John Smith and fam-1 at 2 . 30 0 - dock . ily spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. j John German. j Wesley Payne, who was taken into Mr. and Mrs. Mat Stewart of custody by officers near New Mays-
The funeral will be held Wednesday afternoon at 1:00 o’clock at the oCoper home on south Bloomington street. Rev. H. G Clippinger will have charge of the services- Interment will be in the Deer Creek Cemetery. i
—o-
LECTURER IN SPLENDID
TALK, TODAY
L0GANSP0RT MAN IS HELD
ONE HELD IN SHOOTING FRAY WHEN ONE ALTO DRIVER PASSED ANOTHER
LOGAXSPORT, Ind., June 24— Herbert Pullen, 20, is in jail here today charged with shooting with intent to commit murder in connection with the wounding if Richard Wood, 15. Wood was shot in the back during an auto race between the two. When Wood passed him, Pullen said he shot thinking Wood was trying to force him to stop to hold him up.
POST OFFICE WAS ROBBED
FEDERAL AID EXPECTED AS A RESULT OF POST OFFICE ROBBERY AT GRIFFIN
6 0 T H YEAR IN BUSINESS
T
Founded on Securicv
EVANSVILLE, Ind., June 24—Fed- j eral aid was expected today in the , search for robbers who looted the j Griffin, Ind-, postoffice of a small sum ( Sunday nightThieves left a note threatening to | burn the postmaster’s store unless he kept more money on hand. Three former Griffin postmasters ( are in prison for shortages in their acocunts.
X
GRAND JURY INVESTIGATION
V 2 All Bank Deposits This is what the savings deposits of the United States total. Have you a share in this great fund? Savings banks and banks having savings departments numbered 16,708 in 1923—a 210 per cent gain over the 5,376 operating in 1912 in this country. Growth of savings accounts among people who realize how much money in bank helps them to enjoy life better, is shown in this advance. A growing banlf account often is the key that opens the door to opportunity! Your account will be welcomed here—where 4 per cent interest will help your savings to grow
CITIZENS TRUST CO.. THE HOH£ OF THE SYSTEMATIC SAVER
FIRST NATIONAL BANK THE OLDEST BANK IN PUTNAM COUNTY
tr~
DR HUTCHINSOJ, ADDRESSES
COLLEGE SUMMER SCHOOL CHAPEL THIS MORNING
SIN OF CIVILIZATION
It is understood that a grand jury investigation of .the fatal auto wreck which occurred Saturday night north j of the city will be held here on Wed-
‘ nesday.
Although Judge James P. Hughes
•5-*t**h + + +'h*i**i* 4* 'I* nation's pocket money—here five, AMERICA STILL HAS 8.000 4- there ten, there a hundred. MISERS GLOATING OVER 4- Mr McCoy says of the miser
Roachdale attended the meeting at the
Baptist church Sunday morning.
Mr. and Mrs- Trester, of Indianapolis, spent the week-end with her
sister, Mrs. John Kefauver.
ville, was taken to the Southern Hospital for insane at Madison this morning.
Pochahontas and their families will entertain Brazil and Harmony council tomorrow night. Ladies are re-
24-2t P resent -
The funeral of Mrs. Reliecca Miller was held on Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock at the Long Branch church.
nor Prosecutor Lyon could be located ^
.— I early Tuesday afternoon it was ru-,
Was His Topic and Mag Both Highly mored through various channels that i
Interesting and to the Point the grand jury would be in session
Two More 1 alks
♦—
THEIR HOARDED MONEY 44- 4- 4- 4* 4* 4* 4- 4- 4- 4* 4-
WASHINGTON, June 24.—The mi-
and would question the parties in- ser, sitting nightly in nervous solivolved in the accident. tude, gloating over his heaps of
!
WEDNESDAY.
IN MEMORY
Rev. Williams was in charge of the
ROACHDALE, ROUTE 3
Mr. and Mrs- Dan Weller and I daughter spent Wednesday with B-'
F. Weller and daughter, Lula.
Mrs. New r man Miller and son I In sad but loving memory of Les- . .
Wearing, Mr. and Mrs. G F. Modlin | ter Cunningham, who passed away servic ^- Iiuriil1 was m th e Pleas-
were in Ladoga, Wednesday on busi- 7 years ago, June the 24th, 1917. anl ^ cemetery.
ness - ! The month of June again is here Volz Camp Number .1349 Modern
Clifton Shubert called on Mr. and and ends for us seven lonely years Woodman of America will meet this
Mrs. Grover Clements Friday night- since with you, dear Lester, we did evening at the lodge headquarters at
.Mi.-. Luna Perkins called on Mrs-^ part, 17:30 o’clock. All members are re-
Dan Weller Tuesday afternoon. | Death has stilled your faithful quested to be present. Three candi-
Mrs. Nanc.\ ! lliott and family heait, but your memory is as dear dates to receive the work.
today as lin the hour you passed
away. ; The Graduate School of Arts and
HIS MOTHER. Sciences of Harvard University an-
j nounces the award of an University I Scholarship for resident study to P.
spent a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs* Buddy McCloud, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hope and family called on Mr- and Mrs* Clarence Perkins Tuesday evening. Rev. Breach spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mrs. Sarah WeekMr . and Mrs. Cecil Eggers and family spent Sunday with Charley
Temple.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Chatham spent Sunday with Mr* and Mrs. John
Kefauver.
Misses Geneva and Pauline Temple spent Saturday night with their parents Mr. and Mrs. Charley Tem-
ple.
Mr- and Mrs. Burley Boner and son Clyde spent Sunday with Mrs. Mary BonerMr. and Mrs- George Fitzsimmons
W- B- LaMav, the driver of the car gold, is not a legendary or a fictional
The fourth of theories of lectures whkh collided with the Ford tourinK character. There are 8,000 of him by Dr Hutchinson, managing editor car in which cliffor(| Anadell was in the United States. th , P * hrl ^ la " . ef °". t SU . killed and his wife seriously injured, This is one of the high lights f' . ie ’ ,ns 0 ' u lza '” n ’ is being held here by Coroner Jacob turned up by Joseph S. McCoy, acc- '' i l>R - I" r rn r 0tl ’, *1, T’ E. McCurry. The other occupants of uary of the United States treasury , . . »i i the Anadell car will be summoned department, in his constant delvinj? L S ufril! providing the grand jury meets to- into the monetary affairs of the
nation.
o Secreted at various spots in the .. . . „ United States—whether buried pirate ANY I) E IN FLOOD fashion, at the foot of a gnarled tree,
hidden under the boards of the mi-
about in his previcus lectures, those of politics, industrialism, and the racial sins, are nil bound up with this one of materilaism, in fact, they
all grow out of it.
morrow.
‘Tn this time of pleasure-seeking and mad spending, there are more than 8,000 persons who would rather live in filth and want, suffering hunger’s worst torture, than spend the money they have saved. These arc the country's misers—no creatures of story-books, but living men who keep their wealth because they love to touch and gloat over it. They are quite real—one in every 4,950 moneymakers of the country, and the average treasure is at least $5,500. But why is a miser, Ah. there is an inscrutability that even Mr- Mc-
Coy can not unscrew.
He said that as our civilization goes out to other countries the people cannot but -ee that we come
over
SURPRISE'ICE CREAM SUPPER
Walter Brann was delightfully
COMMANDERY NOTICE
L. Julian of Greencastle, a second-
State conclace Greencastle Com- year student in the school,
mandery No. 11 K. of P., Wednesday
7:30 p. m.
RALPH HOWARD, Cam. E. E. CALDWELL, Rec.
Alva L. Nichols has filed suit in the
Putnam Circuit Court for the collection of a note alleged due and unpaid from Wilbert H. Masten et al. A judgment of $300 is asked by the
Miss Gladys Siddins, of Fillmore, plaintiff who is represented by atwas a visitor in htis city today. 1 torneys, Corwin and Gillen.
o I
Mrs. M. S. Miller is visiting her' Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. daughter, Mrs. Joe Kettery and fam- Claude Cantonwine, west of the city,
SHANGHAI, June 24—Many peo- ser . s floor) or tucked away in socks
pie have been drowned and property and f ru it j ars j s a treasure of surprised at his home 7 miles wen a l rea( ly damaged thousands of dol- $43,000,000. °f Cloverdale, Saturday night, it be-
there with the idea of making lara wort ^ bj : the most disastrous Mr McCoy set out recently to find >"1? his forty-fourth birthday. There money, regardless of the cost in ^ 00 ^* s in history of the Min river, ^ ow this gigantic fortune, missing were about 100 of his friend m-i
human life and happiness. He cited ac ^°. rdin . g to e ^ lvic ® s here to,la y- from the nation’s deposited and cir- relatives prersent.
Russia under the Soviet form of e c ! t> 0 u ( a treat y P 01t culating currency, was held. The evening was spent in governmeift a- an example of sheer aa ' ca P |ta * n 1 " e province of hokien, pjj g conclusions were as follows: talk, playing games, and music, atmaterialisfn. They are irreligious. 35 " llles up the Mln from lts mouth Held by foreigners who have not ter whihe a table was spread which they have|no altruism, because their 18 * ree-quarters under water. The f j ved j n America long enougr. to contained 26 cakes and 10 gallons
ideal is tioney and materialism. entire warehouse district is submerge hui]d up a trust in bank c- i $225,000,- of ice cream.
In spejndng of our connection with c ' . . . 000. Every one had a good time and the Near East he said that the in- ‘ hl PP' n £ ,s niena ced by log rafts of He j d by farmers, who are too far all departed at a late hour, wishing terest of the United States is not . e t,mber companies which are be- from banks or too cau tj 0 us to de- him many more happy birthdays. because pf sympathy, for we turned lng swir ' ed ^ the flood - posit, $125,000,000. o them dofwn until the question of oil 1S . fe 1 ared he ,08s of 1,fe in Fu Held by misers, who live in squalor LAURETTA TAYLOR IN “HAPmade it (materially profitable to enter (bow la . heav y- F1 °ods in the past and d e r ive their sole joy from play- PINESS” AT THE OPERA HOUSE into relations with them. j ave cairtie d > ousands of victims j n(f with their accumulated hoards, WEDNESDAY. '-’U-t
.along the river Min.
In his lectures tonight and tomor-
$44,000,000.
i " | Held by children in toy banks, Regular session Greencastle Lodge Prof, and Mrs. Overman and two $1,500,000. ; No. 1077, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m-
i The balance, 47,500000 which can E. E. CALDWELL, ~ec>.
row Dr. Hutchinson will give the so-
lutions tm the problems he has rats- sons of Urbana, 111., spent a short
ed in his first four lectures. He will time at the home of Rev. and Mrs. A.' no t be Counted for 7n detail” is the
speak ifi Meharry Hall at 7:30 to- T. Riley. Monday. They were mot- , night and at 10:45 tomorrow morn- oring to Switz City, Indiana to visit.
B P O. ELKS
ily in Indianapolis for two weeks. o BANNER WANT ADS PAY
rpHE AMOUNT you save is more important than the amount you earn.
Save systematically by opening an Interest Account for regular weekly deposits.
were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Toney and | daughter Leona, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Boswell and sons Russel! and Eldon, [Mr. and Mrs. John Well , Mrs. Wm. i; Wells, and Miss Ruby Wells. Major Horace Spurgin and family, who were on their way to West Point, visited Mrs. Clara .S.ourgin this week. Major Spurgin is stationed with the regular army at Norfolk, Virginia. He is the son of the lati Brigadier General W. F Spurgin. Alva L. Nichols ver as Maynard Masten and Clarence MeGammack is the title of a suit for complaint on a note filed in the Putnam Circuit Court A total settlement of $225 is asked by the plainiff. Corwin and Gillen represent Mr. Nichols in the
case.
the latter’s mother. Mrs. Overman | i will be remembered as Miss Olive ‘ i Spencer who graduated from the ' School of Music with the class of
1911.
INDIANAPOLIS, June 24.—Influenced by heavy local receipts of 15,00 and (reports of ls<rge runs at
PRAISES PROPOSED MERGER; INDIANAPOLIS* June 24—The merger of five large Chicago grain firms with 5000 cooperative farmers elevators in the middle west under
other markets," hog price's dropped p® ' lirec l ! io I n ° f the A ™*-ican Fa ™ 20 cents on the Idnian.polis livestock Bureau B ? ,le i at '°" V y, 0Ul<l be 3 b ' r ° at exchange today to a new low level ; UCCeSS ’ G ’ ^Cullen head of the for the year. farmer Gram Dealers, Inc-, declared
I today. ,
The market was practically a one-; McCullan started the farmer-eleva-prirce affair, all transactions being tor movement in Indiana in 1920 and at $7.00 to $7.05, with the exception has been selling the crop of Indiana
Central
Trust
Comran^
“WHERE MONEY GROWS”
I i
TWO BOYS ARRESTED Paul Dodd and James Doyle, both former Greencastle boys were arrested in Indianapolis on Monday evening charged with stealing an automobile and participating in a hold-up
several hours before.
Dodd is the son of Rev. and Mrs. L- B. Dodd, who lived in this city for a number of years before moving fo Indianapolis. It is said that Doyle was the same lad that played on the Greencastle Specials last season and who has spent weeks in this city up-
of a few choice hligs which sold
at $7.10.
Shippers were inactive, and local | demand which was active at the start, slumped off in later trading. Pigs were 25 cents lower at $6.50 down and sows were lower at $6.50
down.
The cattle market was somewhat improved with prices steady. Choice steers brought $10.25. Cows and heifers sold at $7 to $8. Receipts were 1,200. The calf market fell off 50 cents to a top of $9.50. Bulk of sales was at $8.50 and $9. Shippers were active and buying interest held up well. Receipts. 900. Sheep and lamb trading was steady with Monday’s price levels. A few
members for nearly four years. “Our plan is just the same as the same as the ne wone,’ he said. “The Farm Bureau plan is larger and will control 75 per cent of the grain going into the Chhugo market if it
succeeds.’’
on frequent occasions
T ■ two are being held in the In- ! choice lambs brought $13. hut the*
Williams won easily in straight
ipuli jail pending a court hear- practical top was $12.50. Receipts, sets. 6-1. ( ‘ intr . , a goo. ’
U.S. ATHLETE WIN'S WIMBLEDO Eng.. June 24— Chalk up anot . r victory for the United States in the world’s championship tennis matches. R. Norris Williams, captain of the American Olympic team and one of the. favorite i n the Mimbledon tournament, beat the Irish champion, E- A. McGuire, today on the historic center couit before a crowd of 8,000.
The weather ideal for Tennis.
YES! GIRLS! WE HAVE THEM—THE NEW DOTTED VOILES BLOUSE PATTERNS BLOUSE LENGTHS THE VERY LATEST AND CLASSIEST FOR SPORT BLOUSES AND ONLY 75c Pattern Easy to make and come in Lavender Poudre Blue—Harding Blue—Jade Henna and Pink. ALLEN BROTHERS “Money’s Worth or Money Back”
