The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 February 1928 — Page 3

THF GREENCASTOE ITA1ET BANNER MONPAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1028.

l[

LASSIFIED ADS

tax was put on liquor they resisted P-alm, fifth and ^itth verses, the law and the government in its forget thee, O Jerusalem, let

light hand forget her skill; let

PUlt —, _ - attempt to enforce the law. Our at—“POa S&W tempt to enforce prohibition has not Som;, OR SALE—A good team of work ! made new law breakers, it has onl\ v ii es. Phone Rural 123. 17-2t revealed some of the deep-seated char- ^^ 0 acteristics of all men who have ever 11 ^ OR SALE—Fresh Jersey cow and, heen engage<| in the liqu< r traffic.” W. D. Grimes, Call Banner^of- 1 .. As eur | y as l7!)2 Washington

17-3t j found it necessary to issue a very

0 strong warning to the liquor men who

^ ' OR SALE:—-JJaby Bootees han 11 wpr p defying the law. His fourth

by Miss Bessie Hammon .• message to Congress deals at length - 342. ^ 17-3; i with this same issue. The definite | | y praised. Rut patriotism is a virtue ‘ ^ “ break with these law violators canu • • * •

OR SALE—Fresh Jersey cow, in 17! , 4t Gn the seventh (lay of Au .

1 ftttd will ■'%

ne

‘If l

my my

tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth, if 1 lemember thee not; if I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief

joy.”

Dr. Taylor said in part:—“This is the language of patriotism whenever and whereever spoken. It sp,aks of a evotion to country which draws r. t back at an> price. It voices a virtue which is much admired and high

enns |

il.

t

jj milker. Theolore Hurst, Route jf U st a proclamation was issued di-

18-2p,

recte<i to the distillers in certain counties in Western Pennsylvania. In

OR SALE:—Set of six Rose Back | this proclamation the distillers were re and Settee. Russell f lann. f.!.,...u-itv, *u..

733-L.

Clapp.

1-t

charged with so misrepresenting the| laws as to make them odius; with

to be practiced rather than paraded. I For the most part we have thought [ of it as something associated with war. This is not strange, for the pat-1 riots whose names are most often in our thought were fighting men. The names of Washington and Lincoln are inseparably connected with the two

— j inflicting cruel and humiliating pun- outstanding wars of these two great

OR SALE:—Pair of mules com-j jshments upon private citizens for no nation's history. However, one can 5 years old, 16 .3 high, L. C. Buis ot her causP t h an that of appearing not think cor-istently of the-e two ' s Ri sncastle R. 2. Phone Mt. Meridian. | to be friends of the law; and with in- great characters without discovering 'JURfltSwl 16-17S20-21 j tercepting the public officers on the that the patriotism they evidenced o j highways abusing, assaulting and oth- in days of mortal combat, wa- no leas

— c revise ill treating them. (How mod- < . idenccd in da\ s of constructive enern thi< 0,1 80Un ' ,B! ) 0n September deavor. The true patriot is quite as

tier,a OR RENT:—Modern Furm-he.i 2f)th the same year another pncla- much in ..maud in the quiet pur•tment, private bath,^ steam h^t.. mat ion was issued declaring tl.it the .suits of peace ., in the stormy pr- -e-

ution ef war. If we ha<i more real

least one defeat this season as fa^ MS we know.

i»i favor of the holding of slaves, and Jennings soon found himself in difficulties. The southern, and most thickly populated area, wa- strongly in favor of the system: in fart most of the settlers at that time had com>

had brought

Today we are printing the record of the Junior Cubs for the season. These youngsters huv. made a great

showing, scoring .dO.-i points to 230 j from he old isouth and

points by the opposition and losing 1 their slaves with them. In certain war.

hut one tilt. The record follows* sections the Kr. nch had introduced

the -ystem before 177B.

of putting it into effect.

It is largely attributable to Jennings that our first constitution, drawn up at Corydon, contained the drastic clause relative to slavery which according to some, held Indiana in the Union, during the civil

“Jimmie"

ATTICA WEDNESDAY. GARFIELD FRID\Y.

Ore ncastle 2<i; Roachdale 2nds. 22 Greencustle 36; Mooresville 14.

Greencastle 18; Spencer 10.

Greenca.-tle 26; Noblesville 16. Greencastle 45 VVa-h. (Ind’pls. 27. Greencastle pC; Ciawfordsville !*.. Greenca-tle 48; Broa 1 Ripple 6. Grrencastle 34: Wash. Ind’pls. 20. ,

Greencastle 8; Brazil 12.

Greencastle 31: Crawfordsville 16.

Gieencastle 54; Plainfield 14. Greencastle :!9; Manual 21. Greenca-tle 13; Brazil 12.

Greencastle 14; Bioad Ripple 7. Gieencastle 48 Van Buren 10.

| Gieencastle 40; Spencer 14.

Juniors Total 505 t Junior Opp. Total 230 Vt

* 'l ' ^ i •

PROG A V - '

ind floor. Phone 385-X.

20-tf

feipi 8

it; OR RENT—On shares, my farm an 100 acres, known as the Shieldhat -j i. 3 wile* west of Stilesville. If ix rested in this call me. Phone 32, ■ Castle, Indiana, or write in care in,,. Phe Farmers and First National , JC( , k. Orville O. Carpenter. 20-3t

OR RENT:—Two rooms, kitchen-

furnished. 303

17-5t

0

and bath, heat I': h Vine St.

it#

lni( . OR RENT:—Two ap*’s modern ,,f ished. Also one space in garage i a.r. <

■■

Hi- nil.

'if'H-

ag# H

RALPH P. CROUSORK

ie 399. 410 S. Indiana St. 15 tf

ROISTER

militia had been called out and that troops would be sent to the lawless district. It is well to remember that the first time in the history of our country that troops were called out to defend the Constitution and the laws of the land, it was against the

liquor interests.

“In this matter of the open violation of the law and the open defiance of the Constitution of the United States, the liquor traffic is still run-

pat lioti in in out politicians today, we. would have less unsavory public-

ity in our public pre.-s.”

“Patrioti.-m is a costly virtue. It is not had without payment of the price. It costs undivided allegiance. One can not he genuinely patriotic and be decided in hi- affections. We found this true in the days of the Wot In War. We had some trouble then with th' hyphen. We had some

Did ynu know folk-, this i- the iu.-t week for this column. It ha- been ou 1 policy the past three years to stall Net Tabs just before the opening

game of the season for the Tiger .. Cubs and to close down just aft v '• t.ht u I l Fridax tncht, winning from their final game of the -eason. We New Winchester, 26 to 20. The half will continue with a -port- section, in.led 10 to 8 in favor of Fillmore, however, during the spring and sum- New Winchestei w.i leading twice by me- months which we hope will une point, but Fillmore soon took

Jennings soon found allies, however in the White river valley. A group of Quaker- from the Carolina# hail settled there, and they were even more bitter than Jennings in their protests against human bondage. Whiletlhi# group was in the minority, their voices, like those of all minoritewere most easih hear.- and their aot-

rnore united.

Governor Jt nnings, due no doubt to his northern education, but also, it lias been hinted, for political seasons,

took sides with the anti -lavery group ni\al. Hi> motto became “No Slaveiy in KDKA, Pittsburgh, , Indiana,” and he lost no opportunity Symphony orchestra.

11 KSDAY’S FIVE BEST RADIOS WKAF, Hookup, 8:00— Kveready

Orchestra.

WJZ, Hookup, 8:00 Annual banouet, \mericun Institute of Mining at Metallurgical, engineers. WOK Hookup, 8:00— Rudolph Ganz

Pianist.

WOR, Hookup, 9:00 Musical Car-

5:15

Little

I ILLMORi: WINS \G MN

.Fillmore added another victory to

ning true to form. Prohibition is folk.- in oui midst who were with us now a part of the Constitution, but but not of us. We havi lieon working this matters little to these men. The' diligently ever since to get rhl of that

pleas- our friemls and reader-.

•*—©

The Cub- will p 1 Amca in th» Veeders-burg gym on Wednesday eve ning due to the fact that Attica iwithout a building suitable for the •evasion! Then, on Friday nigh'. Rausman’s Purple and Gra> netterwill lie hosts to the fast Gai field quintet of Terre Haute.

RADIO'

ill, \

FREE FEED

if >r a short time only, a bag of •ne chick starter with every sale n in i hicks. Greencastle Hatchery. lOdl 1 ! ocust—25 S. Indiana. P h one 525ile" ft ' IC-tf. s-ion —■ o ■— -

—Found—

^ )UND:—Fountain pen. Call Pear 10 Phone 564. I t. nere! 0 .

• (Fitu

’)ST—In Greencastle Wednesday, 10 karat white gold ring with red setn. Reward. Please leave tanner office. 18-2L o

WANTED

ANTED:—Place on farm h\ ig married man. James Love. R. . Phone Clinton Falls. 20-Ip

o——■"

ANTED:—Good used coal range class condition. Phone 767-Y.

20 2p.

-o

—M isceBaneotifr—

NOTICE

irmers of Putnam Co., The Brazil kage Co., Is paying $1.50 for |£| es and cattle. Will remove your l , f rpe 0 f charge,tankage, we have !.50 per hundred, test 60 to 57 per . Deliveries free on my route. Re j| ||i,.e call, Brazil 394 or 6864 the plant never goes out of business.

18-40t. Mch. 3

hi

j

or delivery one car of Harlin nt Coal. A. J. Duff. Phone 317.

18-tf

you need a carpenter, or furnirepairer call Cowling, the handy i. Phone 715-K. 20-22-24-3p

o———

ort Talks by Thoughtful Mother* , Wisconsin Mother gays: "I fin« , hers very well informed on the ^ |fl ject of ‘dope’ in medicine#. Few hers now-a-days would buy a • | duration that contained opiates or 111*'Srform. A glance at the package >re buying tells her this. With Fo- _*.« Honey and Tar Compound, the

ry. It

are begging us to go back to license and regulation on the plea that they will be good and obey the law. They ] may have forgotten their history; we have not. They also claim that prohibition is dehaurhing the youth of the land. Here are some headlines which appeared in a great Chicago

Newspaper:

“Back Barrooms Trap 1 1,000 Girls” “Saloons Contribute Daily To Delinquency of Vast Numbers.” The fai ls printed under these headlines were appalling in their revelation of the ruin wrought by the law-defying liquor trade. The investigator whose article bore these headlines reported that ‘most of the women drinkers in the saloons covered were amateurs who might have been the daughters of almost anybody.’ “Now, to avoid any misunderstanding, let it be explained that the date of the conditions described above is 1914 and not 1928. The#e were the good old days for which so many peopie are said to lie sighing. In those days the ‘sensible plan' of regulating the liquor traffie was in full pos.-e -

ion of the field.

Rev. Bruner quoted a statement from William Lowe Bryan, president of Indiana University, to the effeet that the liquor people have never respected or obeyed a single law in their long history. “Who in the face of a hundred years of law defiance can believe that retreat from prohibition to some milder form will give us a law that the Hquor forces will obey. TMey say that a law that is generally disobeyed breeds direspect for all law and should he abolished. According to that we can maintain respect for law in America only by abolishing every law against liquor and so let the grey wolves have their way with our children. This i# my challenge. 1 make it to the weakminded dry who has crumpled down under wet propaganda. I make it to any educator who thinks it statesmanlike to preach disobedience to laws of which he does not approve. I make it to any statesman who has sworn to support the Constitution and habitually violates his oath. 1 ask you, any of you, to tell us what law the liquor force# have ever obeyed and will not fight as brazenly as they now fight the Constitution of the United States. If we cannot he shown a better line than we have now, we

are going to fight here.”

Mr. Bruner closed his sermon by quoting a paragraph from Washington’s farewell address: "This governi ment, the offspring of our own choice,

~ rrri’ ....... . ! uninfluenced and unawed, adopted upALL OVKR INDIAN A fu „

lOlf'fc, aL., 21, lAhL L,»iter,""’ , ' r "“'"’ c '""" l " lcly in **

n«o, 19, were operated on for apdisici.# in the Bartholowniew coun hospital here. They are sons of

lie tells a true story. It is quickly Ictive for coughs, colds, croup and Sat irritations. Pure as it is sure, I worth many timee it* price.”—

P. MULLINS. Druggiat.

e eni : '

are son#

. and Mrs, Cleveland Wade, near zabethtewn.. PETERSBURG—It’s maple syrup » in Southern Indiana. Syrup is yjt ling from $2 60 to $3 a gallon with ‘ ispecta bright for a good crop.

)U fj! |

.00D SERMONS DELIVERED BY CITY PASTORS

ciples, and in the distribution of its powers, uniting security with energy, | and containing within itself a provision for its own amendment, has u just claim to your confidence am! support. Respect for its authority, compliance with its laws, acquiocen-e in its measures are duties enjoined by the fundamental maxims of true liberty. The basis of our political systems is the right of the people to make and to alter their constitutions of government. But the Constitution which at any time exists till changed by an explicit and authentic act of the whole people is sacredly obligatory upon all. The very idea of the power and the right of the

hyphen. An ovrn greater barrier is true patriotism than the hyphen is selfish greed. The blackest page- in our national history are tho.-e that tell th- story of war profiteering and the prostitution of public < ffire to the promotion of private gains. The I -tory of ’embalmed beef’ and “Tea i pot Dome Scandal” cuu.-e eveiy loyal I American to hang h- hem in veiy

shame."

“Patriotism costs loyalty. One inot truly patriotic who flinches when the test comes. It does not require much patriotism to shout and sing and follow the band in gay procession on some national holiday. It i- all quite* different when the 'tumult and the shouting cease,’ and there is no music by the band, and stern duty is the one and only commanding voice. To be loyal in the pinches is to ne genuinely patriotic. If I am not great ly in error in discerning the signs of tho time#, we are in one of those pin-e-he- now, when to he truly patrieitic one must be unflinchingly loyal to duty. Whatever one may think of thi wisdom or unwisdom which wrote thu Knghteenth Amendment inte> the constitution e>f he Uniteel States, it is theie. 1- enforcement is culling for courage and firmness and is being met with most stubborn opposition in many e|iiarter#. Surely this is an hour when true patriotism demands unwavering loyalty to the constitution [ and to those who are given the ta-k of enforcing the laws by which it is supported. This may prove to be a costly loyalty for many, but it is the price of true patriotism. All honor to our law-enforcement officers who are daring to do their duty at any cost. 1 hail them ah true patriots," “Patriatism costs -i-lf-Denial." Hud George Wa-hington been less a patriot he never would have left his fair acres on the hanks of the biautifu! Patomic for the sacrifices and hardship and suffering- of the Revolutionary Struggle whereby the aspiring colonist wrested their coveted liberities from an unwilling monarch. Had not Abraham Lincoln burned with a devotion to hi# country which would not allow him to rest until he had gone hi* limit for the oveithrow of slavery and the saving of the Union, he m ver would have left the free life of the we-tern prairies for the Gol- | gotha of the nation's capitol. The; -pirit of true patrioti-m is forever: prompting the denial of -elf in the 1 promotion of one’s country's good. | The tiue patriot needs only to be convinced that the welfare of his government demands some pi opened development, and he will give and give and give until it hurts, that the project may be carrie'K out. If |»atri- < tic Americans are not responding with enthusia-m to the proposal of a three billion dollar naval development program, it I- because they are not convinced that such a move in the direction of competitive armament is in thi interest of the country’* welfare When, for the winning of a war we were asked to conserve the food supply by observing wheatle** day* and meatless days, we drew not back from the self-denial. When, for the welfare of the nation, a majority of the people by their vote have ordered that intoxicating liquor for beverage purposes -hall not he manufactured or sold or handled, is it not the part of true p.itrioti rn strictly to observe

Greencastle has now won 9 game and lost eight, meeting some of th strongest competition'in the state.

Muncie went down to Brazil on Sn' unlay and handed' the Clay county lads a 41 to 33 beating. We imagine Secrist, had conskh table to do with

Muncle's victory.

Bainbridge is gaining statewide publicity every day and #• verat fans are picking the North Ihitnam five to be in the final# at Indianapolis. Of course, to do thi,#, Bainbridge will have to win the secional and regional tournnm< nt-. If Greencastle goes out and Bainbridge stays in, we'll back them to the finish. May the best team win is our only prayer.

the lead.

The New Winchester freshmen walloped the Fillmore Junior high. 34 to 2. The half ended 11 to 0. Here is my big >ix: 1. Bainbridge. 2. Greencastle. 3. Fillmore. I. Roachdale. 5. ( loverdale. t>. Russellville. A BREEZ1E FAN. In iaiii surprised everybody, tliem--elve- included, and defeated Purdue by a lit to 37 score down at Bloomington ot Saturday night. The Crimson squad was ahead at the half and played good ball throughout the til'. •ALWAYS TIRED YT NIGHT”— TRY THIS \ healthy person never feels contantly tired. Being “too tired” contantly tell* of -omething wrong. When John R. Gordon, Danville, III., found himself “always tired at night and burdened with backache,” he took Foley Kill*, a diureti stimulant for the kidneys, and writes: “After a ■ few doses, I felt better, could work easier, became stronger, and slept iiundly." Men and women everywhere u e and recommend them. Satisfaction guaranteed Ask for Foley Kills diuretic. R. K. Mullins, Druggist.

Pruitt's protege# wind up a highly

-uccessful -eason this Friday night by Fot GUT SLAY FRY entertaining Jeff of Lafayette on BLOOMINGTON, Fob. 20. (LIP) — the Bainbridge floor. This hould be With an iucompiotni-ing attitude totheir twentieth consecutive vutory. n aid slavery, and thi unsnitrehed --o— 1 ideal* of a man ju-t out of college,

Somebody asked us today if Bain bridge was the only undefeated quintet in tire slate. Outside of YY es! Point, Bainbridge is the only other squad in Indiana that has not met at

.lunalhen Jennlng#, venior took office early age of 25. The n<‘w territory, hi- inaugeration, was

Indiana's first in 1806 at the nt the time of preponderantly'

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MOFFETT & DOBBS

7 x 2=14 x 2=28 Hillion I •* ft , DOUBLED and REDOUBLED all WITHIN FIVE YEARS!!

err 1

people to establish government pnv

■ 1 supposes the duty of every individual (Continued from page one) i to obey the established government.” •iking example of Washington’s at Methodist < hurch fude toward law enforcement. And At the Methodist Church Sunday }ia of more than passing interest to morning the ubject of the sermon t# hi* first real trouble was with was, "The Pike of Patrioti m,” bu.#- ? liquor interests. When the first ed on these words from the 137th

that law, whatever of -elf-denial may be involved? So long as it is law, true patriotism will obey and enforce it. Attempted nullification is treason. The stability of a government like our i conditioned upon respect .for law. An evasion of the law i» an attack upon the flag.”

(Dj^

Chesterfield Cl G /I RETTES

STATE it um our hon#**t belief that the tohaeeos tiMcd in Chesterfield eiguretire are of finer quality and hence of better taate than in any other cigarette at the priee. Llut-CTT A MvsJts Tobacco Co.