The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 February 1928 — Page 4

THE GKEENCASTLE DAILY DANNI'K. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 10i\

—First Showing— Of The New Spring

MILLINERY MODE

/ The Feminine Trend Has

Taken Hold On Women’s Hats

Also.

$1.98—$2.98

MOMIES

i^eijras i auis

“THHUE’S A ( HOWD” AT THE GHANA DA.

Siaofced Her In Pack Like Knife

( Ins*- Straws.

I-mr Erlts.

-Tucks. I’lea Is.

PuNtrl Shades. Small Ornaments.

Head ( (informing.

— I neven Line.

S. C. PREVO CO. Oreencastle’s Style Center

I’ATHIOTK MEETING F’lans are being made by the Woman's Helief Corps for a patriotic meeting to be held in the High school auditorium on the evening of Feb. 22 to honor the birthdays of Washington and Lincoln. A very fine program is being arranged, including an add re,-- by i)r. Tailor, several attractive musical features and other things of much interest. The prizes to the winners of the essay contest will be awarded at this meeting and all school children, their parents, members of patriotic organizations and the public generally is cordially invited. A meeting of this kind has not been undertaken in Greencastle for many years and it will doubtkvs be well attended.

liert

oration

livered on Thursday.

What Lindbergh did for aviation, Harry Eangdon does for screen comedy with “Three’s a Crowd,’’ hi. n ■' feature screen scream, just r< le Showing now at the Granad:. the-

ater.

Eangdon blazes new com ly trail will each of his features, and “Three’s a Crowd" is no exception. It I is the “surprise” picture of this year. It contains multitudes of laughs, and a story which is well worth seeing, j

—o—

Some cowboys are only drug store | cowboys. And some cowboy bands are only cowboy bands. But some cowboy bands are both riding, -hoot

G! AA ] ing, bron, -busting cowboys and n i «Pw.vV | veil. 1 ha h< kind of a'

| cowboy band that the manager is j bringing to the Granad theater, Wednesday only for a program of music i and cowboy roping and other stunts, j McGinty’s Oklahoma Cowboy band was heard from the Crosley Radio! station, WEW, Cincinnati, on October; 25. According to station officials tin j response of the radio audience was immediate. More than (iOOO letters came to WLW in a week with applause for the cowboys. Hundreds I of people have visited the WLW studios to watch their broadcasting. They | return to Cincinnati almost everv | morning to give a program at noon

from the Crosley studio.

The five men and one woman in the band can be identified when they arrive in Greencastle since they wear j their “ten-(|uart” hats, their highi heeled boots, spurs, bright shirts and j bandanas no matter where they are. j “We have to wear them,” Otto Gray, manager of •he band, says “We haven’t any other clothes. We could | not wear shoes because we were all

j raised in high-heeled boots.”

Billy McGinty who organized the cowboy band was one of Colonel ! Roosevelt’s “Hough Riders" and an | intimate friend of the cowboy presi- j 1 dent. At the Cheyenne, Wyo., Fron-

he won the title of “The,

World’s Champion Br neo-buster.'' Because he was a real cowboy and was conscious of the romance attach-; ed to the riders of the plains, he or-1

Bowers, American Circus Corp-1 K a " izpd the cowboy hand in 1!»25 in|

The car was de-l or,ler to bring hack to the present

. la Is The .Medicine My System \lways Needed." Says This Lady.

FNFRALLY speaking our Hals are all small, close lilting; felt con-

tinues to hold its first place; however a few straws are included. I he stock is varied hats to be worn with Spring

dresses, suits and ensembles.

! pains would stab me in the back like 1 a knife and jump from one spot Le I another. My back was always or ! and achy. The pains would get so bad sometimes that 1 couldn’t stand to be on my feet and would have I to go to bed for several days. “Konjola is the medicine my sys- | tern always needed. I could notice a great change after finishing the second bottle and after completing the treatment every ache and pain was gone. I will always stand ready to praise this surprising remedy to

anyone.”

Konjola is sold in Greenca.-tle at the Owl Drug store, and by all durggists throughout this entire section.

— (Adv).

VONCAS’F

TOO AY — TUESDAY

: ' r " ■>:1l) •* :M Til i|

A BRAND NEW PICTFRE J| s -|

jm:

MRS. PAL I. RAINEY.

“The aches and pains of neuritis left my body very quickly after 1 started taking Konjola and I feel other sufferers are looking for just such a medicine, that’s why I am indorsing it,” said Mrs. Raul Rainey, ,T2i; E. Lewis St.. Ft. Wayne, Ind. “My suffering had made life mis orable for me and it seemed 1 couldn’t interest myself ii anything. Every:ime 1 made a nnve these neuritis

Mrs. Ellen Ragan of Pueblo, Colorado, arrived in Greencastle Monday for a visit with Alva Lisby and other relatives. Mrs. Susie Lisby of Marion township is confined to her home by illness.

All alumni of DePauw university in Greencastle may secure tickets for the Senic r-Faculty-Alumni luncheon, to be held Wednesdav noon at 12:20 o’clock at Longden Hall, from Rev. W. H. McLean.

areni X'IIGpart

TI TTLE SENTENCED

\ I.L OVER INDIAN \

VINCENNES—Coal mining rights to 2,754 acres of land, including some of the best mineral pioperty in Knox county, have been bought by James A. Cooper, Terre Haute lawyer. The purchase was made at a, sale for de* linquent taxes for $1H,;17K.27.

—o—

Manferd Tuttle, Greencastle young man, plead guilty to a charge of petty larceny, wheh arraigned before Judge James P. Hughes in the Putnam Circuit Court, Monday morning and was fined $5 and coats and sent enced to serve a ninety day term at the State Farm. Tuttle was arrested Friday morning while at his work at the Zinc Mill. He was charged with taking two electric fans and a spot light.

relink

Every thing's fair

as an up to-th.-minuU leads vou on such a C r 1:i(r , zri and loves as vou'h- sdiW

: iiifc

PORTLAND—Leroy Mock refused to speak to her for a period of -ix months, Geraldine Mock alleged in a

divorce suit on trial here. She asks i t ' Rr I ), ‘y s

$1,000 alimony.

—o—

PERU—The first new Ford auto-' mobile delivered here was stolen from i

AIOKKISON liKOS.

DISH RUING NIGH I < HI GH Ql K KLY STOPPED “A disturbing cough and irri.ated | throat kept me miserable aw; ki at night and prevented others from i sleeping. Foley’s Honey and Tar I Compound quickly comforted and relieved me. Helped my neighbors over ''flu' coughs, loo. Feel I must tell you about it,” says H. C. P , Sailors Snug Harbor, N. Y. Wonderfully soothing and heeling. Bland to the tender throat of a child, effective in stopping the stubborn coughs of grown persons.— K. P. MULLINS, Druggist.

A ( OMI DY, \\ E CAN GUAR VM EE To MAM SEE n I’ODAY.

“NEVER THE DAMES SHAll* - suci

presid

nt. The car

inc-day and stolen

THE FARMER

_ j generation the music and songs of i the early days in the west. McGintv j I sends his hand on the road under — i the direction of Otto Gray, a cow-'

SEEKS DAMAGES FORT WAYNE, Feb 20. (UP) — Mi s Kathryn .lone seeks $10,1)0,1

i amag s in a nil filed here against which a rathe M<> ■ man-Yarnclle Company and dt L n n • Albert R. Berg, its credit manager, • 1 1 a!h ji • ’'.i . imprisonment. i , the kncwledi; The plaintiff, formerly a steno y | on iiepo.-il to r.qihei for Mark'",’ Motors Inc., for | the charge ' , ;i-

Mho is best informed is the one «ho takes advantage of our

money service. COME IN AND GET AC QUAINTED

puncher who during hi youth spent 1 many years with a circus and learned I showmanship in that way. Gray and his wife are both expert ropers and do a number of fancy stunts. Their son, Owen Gray, is | the hand’s comedian and sings side i

The Money Aon Need To Finance Your < riqi Is Here

I splitting songs to the accompaniment!

WE LOAN

From $20 to $20(1 on your own security. As to repayments, make your own terms; straight time or installments.

Phone 15

INDIANA LOAN CO, 2U^ E. Washington St.

WhyThis Fouk

IS TRUTH F»U LLY CAII.IIU am e ri cN's Finest

/

No car in the price class of Dodge Brother:) Four is so ROOMY. No car in this price class is so SWIF 1. No car in this price class is so SIURDY. No car in this price class is so SMART.

/

No car in this price class accelerates from 0 to 25 miles IN 7 SECONDS.

/

No car in this price class is so COMFORTABLE—for none has so long a springbase.

/

These arcFACTS—readily verified—and they explain the immense popularity of Dodge Brothers Four.

No car at near its price offers so many .advantages that Americans value foremost.

/

And no car at ANY price affords its owner, in greater measure, the satis- ., DOOR SCDAN

faction of know ing that for

every dollar invested he ^0/5

has received a full dollar’s i n I F.O.B. DETROIT

return in honest value.

hitc in for Didgc Brother? Radio Prcgum t-vtry 1 hursduy night, 8 to 8:30 (Eastern Standard Time) NBC Red Network.

H. A. SHERRILL

Hodge Brothers Four

of his guitar and his broken-down ukelele. “Bill” Stonehammer, fiddler is so sure of his power both as a musician and as a rough rider that he (Ton $1000 to anyone who can beat him both at fiddling and riding. Fred Wilson accompanied always b\ his dog, Jack, and Whitey Rheuby play a variety of stringed instruments and also sing.

At The Von vast le

8 E. o a] le w te ii noci of nent lari Sat hi

Paul Whiteman Likes the Toasted Fiav of Luckies—His Favorite Brand

. be on i

I K.lil'V

be I nain

e pa

* 7 ?

“It ivaa hut recently, when I started to act as master of ceremonies ivith my hand at the 1 Paramount 7 hcatre, that I realized how vital perfect voice condition teas to a />ir< Pare former. 1 have always been a consistent smoker and fortunately, Lucky Strikes ucre ' inv favorite brand. I like their toasted flavor and, best of all, l can smoke as often ad . ( | U e

like, without fear of irritating my voice, which is

becoming a great asset in my work.”

N0QMA SHEAUtiJ (W* RALPH FOI3BE3 //» l - tue iwTsr.FDOM.awi) y

.* tar

ALSO TWO LINES OF SIXES-T1IB VICTORY AND THE SENIOR

In her latest starring production, “The Latest from Paris,” which icoming today to the Vomastle Thea tre, Norman Shearer has the support of thiee of the gnutest character comedians on the screen, George Sidney, Thenen Holtz and Bert Roach. Each of the three has been a in either stage or scheen production

I and Sidney has. starred in both. He ) lirst made his mark on Broa way in ; ("Welcome Stranger.” Since (titering | pictuies he has been .-taric I in a numhei of Patash and Perlmuttcr ’

pictures, “The Coh ns and the Kelley*." “The Cohens and the Kelley in Paiis” ami other productions. Holtz wa- a Jewi. h character star

at the Yiddish theatre in N w York , and Bert Roach wa- starred three j

yeais ago en the screen in “Excuse Me,” one of th most -uccc.- ful comedie- Metro-GoMwyn-Mayer h

filmed.

In Miss Shearer's new M-G-M vehicle she plays the rol- of a t:avel-! ing -ale. woman for a New York firm i of ci at and suit wholesalers. R ilph ( hoi be * ha- the leading male role of the Lav ling r-pre.-entative » " a j-iv at house. 1

VTUl nitte

norm n Po

Prominent Tobacco ^ “The Cream of

tO D« ral r

the Tobacco^

rocs into Luck' e wf

“Discriminating smokf aws

excellence of Lucky "

rettes by their round

flavor and lack of baJ tfc We buyers know " j wri

It’s toasted No Throat Irritation-No Cough.

Strikes possess these ^ qualities; because " { 9l m pi a

r\( the CtOf ,0te . 1

‘Cream of the manufacture.”

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Hircui

Will

- ai Rintif