The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 July 1924 — Page 4

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THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1924.

OUR JULY CLEARANCE SALE IS NOW ON IN FULL SWINC, IN ALL DEPARTMENTS OF THE STORE.

Sunday Services

YOU WILL FIND A SUBSTANTIAL SAVINO ON PRACTICALLY FVERY THINO YOU BUY

Men’s nothing Reduced V4 to V2 Straw Hats Reduced 1-3 AH Furniture and Rugs V* OH Ladies Dresses Reduced 1-3 to U

LOC l ST STREET M. E. ( HI RCH H. C. Clinpipper, Minister. Sunday school, W. P. Sackett, Supt., J. E. Sharp ami J. E. Courtney, , Assistants. Come and brinp a friend. 1 Help keep up interest and attendance. Morning Worship, 10:40. Theme— ! "Do We Need a Saviour Today?” ' Visitors Welcome. 6:30 Pnion Young People’s Meeting ' in the Christian Church. 7:30 Union Church Service with the Christian church. Public cordially inj vited to attend. Official Board Meeting, Monday night 7:30. Union Prayer Meeting in Locust j Street Church Thursday night 7:30.

NEW TROUBLES AT STADIUM Now trouble comes from the I. L . Stadium from another angle—as if the University authorities had not been bothered enough with that crumbling mass of concrete. I he trouble now is the objection to citizens of east 10th street to the dynamiting of the stadium, and an open threat to go into court and ask an injunction against the blasting. At this time the question is up in the : air, although for the present the blasting has been suspended on the tatement of Pavil Wilson, who live* across 10th street from the stadium, that the health of his wife will not permit the noise of blasting. Also objections are made that the heavy explosions crack cisterns and other such cement and concrete work.

without blasting and it is understood that a different method of blasting is to be put in effect. This “different method of blasting will likely he the employment of an expert on high explosives who will he able to raze the stadium by small and effective blasts. A gang of men is working on the , structure with all kinds of wrecking equipment, but the work is slow, tedious and hard. It will cost thousands of dollars to wreck the stadium, and Contractor Leslie Colvin is doing the work under the direction of the L niversity authorities on a per cent, cent, basis.—Bloomington Telephone.

iiiimiiiiMiimii

COME IN TONIGHT We are Open until 1) in Our Dry Goods and 10 in Our Clothing Department

However ,it is stated that it is an impossibility to raze the stadium

maple HEK.HTN

Dr. and Mrs. D. E. Cripe, Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Barker and daughter Beverly spent Friday with Mrs. ^ Cripe’s brother James Merryweather ( and family. They also visited their! aunt Mrs. Letty Marsh and other old ! friends in the city and vicinity.

S. C. PREV0 & SONS

Mrs. Grace Black, Pastor and Sun-, day School Superintendent. Sunday School 9:30. Preaching Service 7:30. Public in-j

vited.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

'

SUMMER PLAYERS

DePAUM UNIVERSITY Presents

‘ON the Hiring Line \ Satirical Comedy in Three Acts

Wednesday, July 30, 1924

ASBUKY H \LI. Tickets on sale at

Uangdon's Book Store.

GREENCASTLE Adm. 35 and oOc

Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Sunday morning service in the Ader block on the second floor at 10:43 o'clock Reading room opened Wednesday afternoon from two till four o’clock. Wednesday evening testimony service at 7:43.

Face Facts, Man!

ST. PAUL CATHOLIC CHURCH

Father Walsh, 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.

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

BIRTHDAY PARTY July being tie twentieth birth-

lay of Miss

Ida

COLORADO SPRINGS MEETING COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., July

Tobin, seventy-two 26—“Curtain for the workman’s hum-

of her friends gat! ered at her home at 807 Block strert. The house was beautifully decorated in sweet pear, snapdragons, poj lies and nastur-

tiums.

Party gainer were '■played, and

•lainty refreshm* ts of ice cream and cake wore erved. F.vsryone present were vet much enjoyed and

all departed w! hing Miss many mure happy birthdays.

hie cottage," and the last act is on, Andrew J. Thomas, prominent New York builder, predicted before the National Association of Building Owners and Managers association

here.

In the next act we shall see the modern apartment house—modern to

Tobin t * 1e ' a,t d eta >l—occupied by the erst-

i while cottage group, Thomas said. Great strides in this direction have already been undertaken, and with

Harris su< ’^ success that Thomas vistuulized

a nation of apartments within the next few years. "Manufacturers and employers having large forces of

will furnish the cost,” Thomas

Wor' nen and their fam-

ilies will enjoy every convenience

Sunday school, 9:30 a. m. Classes I are beginning to get located in thets ; now rooms. The young married people’s class is starting off with

good promise.

At 10:35, instead of the regular sermon, there will be an address by John Cody, a DePauw man of 1923. Union meeting at the College Avw. mie M. E. church in the evening. At the Sunday school hour, a special session for the young people (of White Lick Baptist assembly association will be held in the new i senior assembly room. o

You know that growth and continued patronage in any business depend upon SATISFACTION in every transaction.

RECTOR BROTHERS Funeral Directors j Ambulance Service Picture Frai^r Phones: Office 341; Residences: 673 and 457-K *

You know’ what the growth of HOT SPOT HAS been.

You know that HOT SPOT patronage has been constantly increasing.

There’s just one cause for it. Folks go w’here they get the best gasoline for the money!

B \ N Dl l IS Ml LED

TERRE ‘HAUTE, July 20

- >n Frazier, idle; "d negro bandit, died in a hospital hei today from a bid-

et wound.

He was shot by a policeman last men un< l er them r ight when he and two other negroes npui'tments at no; r attempted to hold up a police auto- l ,r(l dicted

mobile which w; ambushed to cap- w *^ enjoy every "ure the negroe who had criminally available to the millionaire, although attacked a young woman and hail perhaps on a miniature scale."

and the path leads straight to HOT SPOT!

ommitteed three other hold-ups.

INDUSAl’OLIS LIVESTOCK

This is the only solution, the builder asserted, in a specially prepared letter read to the convention, to the high cost of keeping up a home. The

CHRISTIAN CHURCH Levi Marshall, Pastor. Sunday school 9:30 a. m. Mrs. E. R. Bartley, Supt. Communion. Greetings from the Pastor to his congregation to be read . Let everyone be out to hear this message. Union Young People's meeting at 6:30. Union Evening Service at this Church with Rev. Clippinger, of Locust street church, speaker. Special music by choir and orchestra. Miss Virginia Kelly, director of' orchestra. I

It IS a better gas. Quality through and through. And it costs no more. Try a shot of

■f

EXECUTORS SALE OF REAL ESTATE

hi

Wednesday, Aug. 6th, 2 o’clock p

Dr the

415 North Jackson st.

am ?d.

1 will sell to the hi,idlest bidder the house an of dames Ihuiyy, deceased, located on the cometH n.Jekson and Pairiry streets in Greencastle. E Sale to 1m- at public auction at the above nan place and time. ‘ v TERMS:—One half cash, one half to he [laid i* month from date of sale, purchaser srivimf note w:tE n teiest at 8^ and secured by mort<ra<re on the real

R0SC0E DAGGY, Executor DOBBS and VESTAL Auctioneers Friday, August 8—“The Shepherd of the Hills,” a play.

afi Pr Dr of Fo

BPBT

nazarknk < hur< h 217 East Washington Street

We are back in our church since the

INDMNAPOI is Ind Ink- 9R_ * ' ol R ' , ‘ , l |in K up a nome. The ‘ ‘ ‘ manufacturer may, by providing his hs/nand was sufficient to boost hog . ; \ 1 K n,s Prices 25 cents at the local livestock * , ‘IfT r V" many ^

♦‘wchange today ‘ f the cost of h,s employes’ close of our tent meeting.

A blanket price of $1025 covered 1( ; cate ‘ her " ^ a convenient I ill weights and kinds. Receipts were ^ t , l ’ e ‘ r ^ ’ pr0V,dc estimated at 6.000. them with comforts hitherto undream-

ed of below the class of mederately

wealthy Americans.

A greater degree of happiness due to modem conveniences, a day lengthened in many instances by two hours by more convenient location, and less bother with home problems for the man who must provide and keep up his own domicile were held out as the

new system of

housing employes in large centers of

industrial life.

“Rentals have forced the workingman and his family from their col-

^ lages,” Thomas asserted. “Since the Henry O'Hair was in Indianapolis 1 war ' ,ricps for a11 'Sellings have gone

to such a price that the wage earner

-•stimated at 6.000.

Pigs were steady at $8.00 to $9.50. .Lough packing sows were $8.75 to $9.00 and smooth packers sold at a

•angv 25 cents higher.

Competition, light receipts and ligher grain prices have kept the narket unsettled most of the week. Cattle trading was light with only -00 head offered. leers sold at

$10.3.5.. Cows sold at a ranpe of $6.00 a,,vanta ^ of the

to $7.00. U A slow market was rseponsible for » fifty cent decline on the calf

market

Spunday school 9:3 0a. m. Preaching Service 10:45 a. m.

Young People’s Meeting 6:30 p. m.

Evening Service 7:30 p. m

Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7:30. Good prayer meeting last Wednesday night with good attendance.

Mrs. and Miss Jay, Pastors

GASOLINE

THE PRESBYTERIAN ( HURCH Victor L. Raphael, Minister.

Sunday school 9:80. Mission Sunday Morning Worship 10:40. Rev. E. A. Arthur of Crawfordsville, will preach. Union Young People’s Service.

6:30. in the Christian Church.

Union Service, 7:30 in the Christian Church. Rev. H. C. Clippinger will

speak.

PUMPS in GREENCASTLE FianiJin Street Garage T. J. Keanedy Wm. A. Cook’s Store (Sooth end Main st.) VV. A. Patterson Pennsylvania Restaurant George Snider South Jackson Street North Jackson Street Filling Station

BELLE UNION L. N. Scott Garage

REELSVILLE Mercer Brothem Reolsville Filling Station (At Pleasant Garden)

STILESVILLE E. H. Bourne

oday on business.

can no longer remain in his former

homo.

Rev. E. A. Arthur, pastor of tho Memorial Presbyterian church

MOUNT MERIDIAN Larkin Garage ( LINTON FALLS S. O. Ensor General Store CLOVERDALE T. C. Utterback

PUTNAMVILLE J. A. Cooper

FILLMORE Mc( am mark & ( learwater

BRUNERSTOWN Ellis Grocery Store.

of i

( o* ..-in Mrs. S. C. \estal will ar- memorial rresoytertan church o •iv<> Tuesday for a visit with W. B. “This condition has forced the em- Crawfordsville will occupy the pu’ Vestal and family and other rein- ployer, who must keep his workmen pit of the Presbyterian church to" ives. f ol. Vestal has been stationed contended, and must pay them enough j morrow morning Mr Arthur ha’ n the War College at Washington for to live on, to look around for a rem- ^ a number of friends in this c itv who

HOT SPOT GASOLINE CO. OF GREENCASTLE

the past five years. This summer edy. This remedy will be found alias been spent in an inspection tour most entirely in apartment houses, if New England on behalf of th n owned by the employers themselves, ear department. and rented at perhaps a small profit.”

will be pleased to know that llt to supply this church again. S. R. Purcell of this city was Indianapolis today on business.

FOR SALE-BREEDING EWESr

Just received some choice Ohio DelarvB breeding ewes: 125 yearlings; 125 two I years; 150 three years; 104 four years.| with lambs by side. This is a good lot oi| heavy shearing, lots of quality.

JUDGE TRIBBETT Two miles west of Stilesville on the J National Road f 1

ADDITIONAL LOCALS

Local band practice on Momlay evening at 7:30 o’clock. All members requested to report. The Portland Mills baseball team will play the Mecca nine on the Portland Mills diamond Sunday afternoon. Mecca has won eight out of the same number of games played this year, while the Portland Mills team have won five out of seven games played. Mrs. Matilda Tabor, west Poplar street, has purchased the residence of Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Throop, comer of Washington and Locust Streets, and Dr. and Mrs. Throop have purchased the vacant lot immediately north of F. M. Lyon, and owned by Mr. Lyon and will erect a new home, starting

immediately.

Mrs. James Woods will -P*' day with her son, Mr. and ^ S bert Woods and family.

Dr. and Mrs. T. L. Harrif■ i daughter, Mary Katherine. ^ win, Kas., are here visiting ris’ parents. Mr. and ^ Shafer. B Will H. Taber of Cha’-'-^P Tenn., will be the guest ^uni his uncle and aunt, Mr. W

R. W. Shafer.

CHICHESTER,H

1*111* In Kr4 *" « U.M

boVS. w- *

year* known il Dost. SafKl^’ SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVER'"

DANCE 0LD TRA H-S PARK TONIGHT H CTI„ 0 d T s 0 u H nS a H y E N S ,”.'

Bathing. Summer Refreshments served on the Ground. Plenty of Parkimr Qn*™ w„n t • j r> . ^ .

Sunday. This Park is Maintained for the iw P ’ .. ' ?hted - Best Order Maintained by Special Officers. Dancing Tonifft

and Sunday. This Park is Maintained for the Best Peonle in This tv. v - * 1 ‘ ™ a . a " by Special Officers. Dancing Toms' Duty to Report Either of These to the Management. We Thank You. ™nuni y. o mproper Dancing or Improper Conduct Permitted. Patrons it is