The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 May 1928 — Page 2

THE GREENCASTEE DAIEY BANNER, MONDAY, MAY 21 1928.

THR nilM BAfHfRB

Jones left Sunday for Chi-]

Eatrred la the 'Po»» Olflee at Greenraxtlr, ladlaitn. »» xerond clu»» matt matter, t'ader tlie art of March 3,

1«T».

SirlHirrlyvtlon pri^e. 10 per

fferk.

fldlftadaU

Hi.-lesses At Banquet Tuesday. Mr .Hillary G. Bailey and Mrs. Wayland Bailey will be hostesses Tuesday evening at tlte home of the former, N. Penn.'jdvtn ia Indiaiiapoi'j, i,t n banquet following hd’istioii of Meredith Nicholson as an honorary n ember of tha DePauw chapt ?r cf Siyma neii t Civ’, national professjo ial joum;:lisi : ’ fraternity. Pictur s if the host's ■ s appeared m the tr.dia:’ > olis St' i this morning. of, .j. .f* «j« *h MH/rittl Saturday. Saturday evening at 8:30 o’clock in the Canaan Chunh, Miss Olive Lisby daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles I.isby became the bride of James Mreks. They will reside in Indianapolis where each is employed. Mrs. Week is a graduate of the Fillmore high school ami is one of the most pi.pulai young women in Floyd town-

hip.

Miss Clark was maid of honor and Herscht I I.isby acted us best man. The ceremony was followed by a re caption at .he home of the bride’s parents, a, 1 refreshments wire

served.

4* 4* *f* 4*

Keystone Bible ( lass Vleeting. The Keystone Bible Class will hold its social meeting at the home of Mrs. Marion Weddell, H04 South Col-' lege Avenue, Tuesday evening. Mrs. Higgins and Mrs. Aide will have charge of the meeting.

%>• *!* 4* C. To Meet.

Mis. Charles Rogers of Bicknes* is ily.

the guest of Mrs. W. S. Grubb.

was the week-end guest of

castle friends.

9 l

The s. C. C. Club will meet with Yli Nellie Browning, 7111 Fast Wash inf ton street, Tuesday evening at

7:30 o’clock. •i*•!• *•*•* *

Parent-Teachers’ lo Meet. The liitrli School Parent-Teachers’ Assocu’i >n - ill inee- *his evening in ’he Hig i School auditoriun. at 7..'.it i ’clock, i'.' ere will li • a mu ica! prograin and readings, nv! a dm-us.-ion of vital pioldems to ’h- parents and patrons. There will be talks on ipiesti .n- . ( the day. All patrons and teachers ari t.rged to ettend.

+ •!• + + +

Woman s ( hd) Has Picnic.

The Weim-u's Club memliers an I guests enjoyed the annual picnic on Saturday afternoon at the lovely home oi ,M> and Mrs. Grafton l.ongden, e 1 if the city. There were

thirty- nresent. A delicious picnic | trenches two feet wide.

■ uppe, -a a-. :eived and 1l>c occasion proved ’o oe a very delightful affair.

d* + + + +

Ho ton < Kdi Pit n.c. Tlie Boston Club annual picnic will be held at the home of Mrs. Eugene Light on East Seminary St., Tue-day at 6:iHl o’clock P. M.

d* + •!• + ■>■ d"

Pirnic Yleeiing Tuesday.

McWelhy-McCoy Wedding Imitations| Mr. and Mr:. Chuiles N McWetbyi liave issued imitations for the mar-j rjage of their daughter, Miss Anna-1 belle to Air. Kenneth Davis McCoy, I

on Saturday afternoon, June the' .

ninth, at four-thii.;. o’clock at tbe!^ on bu8inMS Monrra y-

.ViethisU-i (’hurch in Greencastle.

+ •}• + + + +

I.ocal Girl m V. cd. Miss Kthel Boyle, daughter of Mr. and Airs. George It. Boyle v\dl become tlie bride of Brine 11. McIntosh, at tlie Boyle home here on Saturday, June Ifith., it lias been announced. A splendid picture of the briilo-to-bc was reproduced in ihe so, iety section of tlie Indianapolis Stai on Suudayj

morning.

d* 'l* *t" + d*

| Guests At Theater. Mr. and Mrs. James Billie, were guests of Mr. and Mr.-. Andrew Durham and daughter, Joan Sunday at the Indiana theater in Indianapolis. Cro-Tal-'Fm To Meet. TMe Cro-Tat-’Efn tircl.: will h-ild a called meeting at tin home of Mrs. Jacob Kiefer, Tuesday evening at 7:410 o’clock. There will lie importiiit business to transact. Gone To Convention. Miss Elisabeth Ward lias gone to Michigan City, Iik>.. to attend tlie Business Women’s State (Convention which is being held there. Miss Lucy T. Bowen, president of the local chapter, Miss Ella Mahmuia and Mrs. Marie Zaharukos of tlie Greencastle chapter are also attending.

•I* d* •!* d* d*

Crescent Relakah 'lo Miet. Crescent Jieix kah Lodge will meet in regular session, this evening at 8:00 o’clock. There will be election

of officers.

C. Ed cago.

Fred Boyd of Reelsville is driving

a new Ford Coupe.

Mrs. A. R. Chenoweth of this city j JAMES M. (K5WEN -jhas been called to Cincinnati on ac- | With the aimouncement that Jamecount of the illness of her sister. M. Ogden of Indianapolis will be a

candidate for the Republican nomin-

Alojino E\ans, who was taken to K ^ nn f 0T attorney general of Indiana the County Hospital Saturday, was ; ^ otp primary convention this

CLINTON FALLS

Personal And

V ab ^ t0 l*‘ ave an< l return to bis home, j t ^ p putnam County deleIiVttw _ . , , . in the convention can be *.s-

Mrs. John Robert- and little daughter of Anderson who were here for

Fay S. Hamilton was in Crawfords-1 the funeral of Mrs Mary Day, have

ietnine,i home.

The meeting here at the church by i Rev. W. E. Wilmoth, of Indianapolis 1 | Sunday, was well attended. Mr. and Mrs. George Pierce and Rev. W. E. Wilmoth ate Sunday dinner with Air. and Airs. C. E. Goddard Mrs. Thomas Bettis was taken to the Putnam County Hospital Sunday evening, in McCurry’s Ambulance, she has lieen seriously ill for more

than a week.

i SttSiSffiiSfQiH

WASH frocks SIZES TO J2 $1.88

Mrs. Eula Stagg? spent one even-

. „, „ _ . ,■ Mr. and Mrs. E. J.

Mr-.. - ward • ,,1uh 1 fen j; a ton, Indiana, were the week-end | attpn( j p ^ ]>Pauw University, and is a few .lays in Terre Haute. . | gupsts of M n But t e rfleld and fam-l thp typp ,hat should* h«Jd high office.

gates to the convention can be ossuredof voting for a high grade man, if they cast their votes for Mr. Ogden

and there is no reason why ’ they ing last week with Mrs. Nelle Bettis, i g j should not give all to him. Mr. and Mrs. Chailes Spencer spent i Butterfield of; Mr Ogden is widely known here,] Sunday with Aunt Maigaret New-| g

’ ‘ gent.

Mi. and Mrs, Wdbur Single and

Charles McCurry is confined to hisIMr. and Alls. Dauglierty of Lebanon home on Berry street, by illness. I visited Mr. and Mi>. N. W. Peaboody

, of this city yesterday.

Miss Jean Leinberger has accejin-d |

n position at the Eitel Floral Co. 1 Mrs. Thomas L». and Albert Bow-

i man of Los. Ang» l*'-, Calif., are vis-

A. J. Dehler of Brazil was a ^ ,us, ‘ i^jug tu-re. They diove throug'i, ness visitor in this city Monday. | making the long tup in about eigiit

Miss Then. Ranmy of Indianapolis days.

Green-

to New York of his father.

by the serious iUttes-

Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cra°k of Ind ianapolis spent the week end with J.

P. Cia-k of this city.

Bryce Brown, city fireman, attended the auto races at Jungle Park on

Sunday after-noon.

The DePauw choir wa- in Anderson Sunday where they were on the program at a church service.

James M. Ogdui "f Indianapolis, and a candidate for the Republican

Capt. G. P. Savage ha.- been called nomination for attorney g. neiat of

Indiana, visited h<o • ."'unday after-

noon.

l.ast rites for Mrs. Mary Day were lield from the McCurry Funeral home Sunday afternoon at two o’clock witli the Rev. B. H. Bruner in charge. Interment was in Forest Hill cemetery.

The Safety Fleas will meet tonight in the O. & I. engine room. There will be initiation and refreshments. Former employees of O. & I. are invited. Lvan Strain, secreAlr. ami Mrs. C. Landes, Clinton tar ^’

Falls, aie the purent- of a -laughter j The funeral of Gaien Robinson, who

died Friday morning at the home of

If he is nominated and elected, the people of this community will be assured of the kind 'of a Republican and the type of a citizen who will serve his state to the best of hiability. ■«

FIRST ANNIVERSARY Just a year ago, a slender,

eyed youth of 2f> years, wrote a chap

Mrs. Roy Jarried and children aie spending the week with her father 1 [A David Corder. ] S

BUILDING COLLAPSES

WABASH, Ind., May 21. (UPl — Work cf clearing ntny of tT< debri-

(•J

!l

^ 1 cf hundreds of ctHneep., heoLen and ira«hed when ♦he Wat-osh Cabinet < ompany butt i’jig tollapsed. was well ^ underway tony and the plant’’ex- ^

rexted to it,- jack on schedule oper-

ation within a few days.

ter in history Dial will laA through the ages to come. Tt)is chap, an unknown air mail pilot named Charles A. Lindbergh, took off in his silver monoplane “Spirit Of St. Louis,” from the flying field at New York

City for Pari-, Franca.

While millions waited with breathless interest and with prayers on then lips, the tiny plane roared up the coast of tlie American continent and then soared east over the treacherous Atlantic. Through tlie night, the young man at the controls, listened to the steady hum of the motor, sometimes flying just above the white-capped waves and at other tim-

es soaring to a heighth of 10,000 feet | had caus. d the storing of extra cabi-

! S

Pretty new frock, mj

111 riliYTitw _I

fine dimities

the broken jd full, trimmed with'uq^l! :em caused jg 'J* 11 ' Dozens of ^

born to them Monday morning. Major W. R. Orton has sold his property on East Washington St. to George Long. 708 So. Lucust St.

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Redefer of Indianapolis -pent the week-end with H. L. Jackson, Mrs. Reliefer’s father.

BI.UFFTON, Ind., May 21. (UP)— Floyd petzel, of Bluffton, holds the 1 I. h-catehiog championship belt here. | The new champ hn - just caught a 35-inch carp m the Wabash river . here. The fish weighs 22 pounds. In his catch, Petzel wrested the

Alumnae fish-catching champion' hip from Ray

chapt’ will hold iti piynrc, Tlies-1 Kershner, who recently displayed a day at (>:0n o'clock I’. M. at tlie home 15-pound “Sower Trout" which lie alof Mrs. George Manhart in North-j so caught in the Wabu-h river near

wood. j this city.

PKRFEr I Elr L.V.MHNt, t.E \R PARIS, May 21 (l!P)-,A French aviator, Paul Peuillot, ha perfected a landing equipment which will enable airplanes to come down anywhere on land, even on a mountainside, without danger of overturning. in lecenl aest al I.i■ Bou!'g-“t, he

ieplace.1 the landiii.' wheel with; Terre Haute visited Sunday with Mr. (aterpillei it*: * I -, and ucceciled in'and Airs. Paul Leinberger, 8 bever

landing in a field rut n"i(i«s wiinlrdgeSt.

Grover Boots is visiting in Willoughby, Ohio with Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hunt. Mr. Boots is a brother-in-

law of Air. Hunt.

Mr. and Mrs. Hug i Owen arid children were in Craw fordsville Sunday, where they visited with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Prather and daughter, Betty Jane of Decatur visited Sunday with Mr and Mr=. I. D.

Snider.

Janies Elsberry and family of

• ITCHES BIG m m

Kappa Alpha Theta

/ Jtff m

MEMORIAL ’DAY’

tiff. H AVE a large •Ksortmcnt of YY beautiful wreaths and other mi ninrial pieces in pieusing design*, also many attractive cut flow ers and polled plan's for Memorial Day. CEMETERY AND LAWN VASES (iron and Cement) Eitel Floral Co.

WE DELIVER ON MEMORIAL DAY morning

JR?) s fb?;;:-. JX?; V' m.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Downing and family of Terre Haute spent tin-week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Edward

Hoffman and family.

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth i. Todd, motored to Gruy.-.ville Sunday and visited Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Vail, par-

ent? of Mrs. Todd.

Mr. and Mrs. Bert Wright, Mr. Edwards and Dorothy Edwards of Indianapolis visited with friends in

< iieenea.stle Sunday.

Mr-. Tom Bettis of Clinton Falls was hi ought to tin- Putnam County Hospital Sunday where she will undergo medical treatment. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Lane of Bainbridge entertained Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lane and daughter, Mi*? Ruth, of this city at Sunday dinner. Pictures of the new officers for DePauw University’s Press Club were Liven in the picture section of the Indianapoll? Star, Monday morning. Mias Lucille Thompson has returned to her home in Terre llaut" after •sjiendirif a f-w days wuh Mr. ar.d A is. Edward il.-ffman an I family. Mr. and Mrs. L W. Hud I in were in Terre Haute Sunday where they took their daughters, Enid and Erma hack to Normal School after they had spent the week-end here. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Rogers and Mr. uikI Mrs. Charles Webster motored to Bloomington Sunday and visited Robert Webster who is attending the Indiana Medical School.

his son, L. E. Robinson, in Stilesviiie, were held Sunduj morning at 10:00 o’clock at the Christian church in Stilesviiie. Burial was in Stilesviiie cemetery. Mrs. George Gardner and Mrs. h. P. Mullins were in Crawfordsville on Sunday where they visited with Mr Rosa Wright, who is undergoing treatment there it the Culver Ho. - pitai. On the return trip they visited with Miss Kate Snyder at New

Market.

Lee Francis, a penal farm escape

above the biiny deep.

Late in the afternoon, he sighted the Irish coast, and then at 8:30 that evening he circled he French'capital tnd landed at I/> Hourget field. This modest, curly-haired aviator had completed a non-stop flight from America to France. Over night he rose from obscurity to world fame. “Lindbetgh!” was on the lips of old and young. He became America’s iieio. Crowned heads of Europe paid him Irtiinage. And then, when he returneil home, the United States left nothing undone to heap upon him the

honor be deserved.

"Lindy’’ then mud" a t >ur of Die lami of Ids birth. Thi- was followed

More than 200 new cabinets were plunged into tlie basement when extra weight on the second floor caused it to give way, carrying tin- iov er floor and contents with it.

A deluge of water from

automatic sprinkler system caused g hundreds of dollars additional dam-!® age. if] The addition to the main building |j

in which the crash occurred hud been ja x n in use only a few weeks. Heavy sal- J H P||g4i| es demands and increased production m " * * MMII

l/snanEi

< from. For tri*Y oi house Wear. Sig| |

e., -inuil women andl wo len Extr&orifihttf 1

nets crated for shipment in the new

building.

riaBwK'apiffWj

subscribe for thi

HOME HADE FEED COMBINATION MAXES I

[ i8an

MADE OH THE FARM BY mixing -»■' *-'“r-—■—

80L3 C X.HOUN0 CORN H

PligrwHfoT MinDUNGS

f - CMKKDZP'hAVV BONC'j 5 qvctERSHiu .: on ’ umestonC

r^AMOWniWfln - CMWttAIAUT ’/r—

(5

AT THE SAME TIMC FEED -j

ha-: been brought from New Albany | by a “good will” trip to Centiai to the Putnam County jail and will I America. Lindbetgh becunu tlie peace/ probably he sent to the Inndiana , time amt'a-sndor of th" U. S.

state reformatory for one to years for escaping from the

Farm.

five State

-a=-o-

LEGION’S NATIONAL MEETING SAN ANTONIO, Tex., May 21.— When 10,000 women from all parts of the United States meet in San Antonio May 28 for the biennial convention of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs and 40,000 more assemble here dll October 8 fur the annual national convention of the American Legion Auxiliary, they will find the last stronghold remaining in ihe l nited States of old-fashioned devotion to an aristocratic social ritual ami elaborate social convention. In addition to the many tilings of-' historic and scenic appeal in this Southwestern country, they will find also the old Spanish customs and the influences of two centuries under the rule of Spain. The tradition of the Moorish restraint of woman, brought in in this way, has had a hig influence and still persists as a vital fac-

tor in social relations.

Another powerful factor working in the same direction is found in the very large German elemtn which lias settled m San Antonio and all Texas. The German woman is, traditionally, very much circumscribed and has for centuries been held pretty much tire old ideal of "Hausfrau”

“Hausmutter.”

With the e two influences in the direction of conservation in woman’s econotni. and social relations goe= a third perhaps even more powerful. Han An*onio and all this part of the country, from the standpoint of its American elements, was settled almost exclusively by people from the old South—from Virginia, the Carolinas, Tennessee, Grorgia, where

Returning to St. Louis afte; hi> flight to he Dop es, hi-, friend.: and even the State T)epu:tm<nt urged that he quit flying. He replied,’ "There must be pioneers in everything.” And now, just' one short year after ids historic iiip the trim little monoplane with more than 40,**(K: miles of service to 'ts uedit, nas been placed in the Smith-oman Institute at Wash ington, to be viewed ly lutiqc generations. The pilot, however, is still the quiet unassuming youth, but he is busv witli plans for America’s supremacy in tlie air, both commercially and for defense in casd of war. He is the nation’s hero, and will always be “Lindy” and “The lame Ragle” to all until deatli and evei after.

SKIM

Vtahmta Sffi for ttuf StXWMkl/

0m iWaeeiA

Uiaflfl

< Hit K RATION fAN RE MADE AT HOME

Liquid Skim milk is Only Drink eluded In Wisconsin ( ollege Mixture.

TRACK MEET TUESDAY The annual public school track and field meet will be held Tuesday morning at Hlackstock Field, Coach W. E. liausman announced this afternoon. Children of the First, Second and Third Wards will take part. CLOVEKDAI.E H. Denny returned Saturday from MartinsviHe where be has been under treatment for a week. He i? much im-

proved.

E. C. Clearwater? suffered a painful cut to the index finger of his right hand Saturday while operating the meat cutter in Denny's store. Win. O’Neal of Kokomo spent the week-end with hi? parents, Mr. and

Mrs. John O’Neal.

Mr. and Mr-. Willie Allee of Greencastle visited tile latter’s father H.

tl,,, Denny Sunday.

to

and

aristocratic idea of protection, and I MrBi Maun Polk and daughter also r'dri tion, of women reached it? Dhylli- of Oaktown leturned Friday full flower. after spending the week with W. S. Theo. 'n'livrce have, it is true, Duffis and family, Miss Dorothy Bur been tiemendnpfly modified by mod-1 ris accompanied them home for a

em conditions and ideas, especially] v > l, tL

the idea of <neater freedom for wv R. V. Murphy is suffering from inmen, end also by the cosmopolitan j totnal injurie- received Satuiday popula.it/> which if to a surprising 't'Kht in an automobile accident. He degree characteristic of San Antonio. wa * "ne of a party who had started

large part in gi/mg on a Ford truck to a charivari. As

Dm ca : lt . iicietv here. they crossed road 43 at the railroad Dnl w:tliu: ♦he six mordhf 1 they wer* struck by a Martinsville nr so, for instance, have women von- car going south, Mr. Murphy was turod ’o stroke 1.1 -<ub!ir in San An-j thrown to the street and was uncontonio. sh.r, (p,. courtesies a> J | scious for some time. No one else

formal-ties are ohm rved in liusine.se was injured seriously,

as we | ns social life than in the Mr. and Mrs. Glen Lyons and son norib en ' . i-t. V< men in off t*s | Keith spent Sunday with G. G. Knoy

exjiev-r, m l receive, those olj-time and family.

0M,rt * ' nr wind J v, Mr. ami Mr. Orville Ru n ,| P | an<)

Funeral services for Mrs. Flossie | vpr y large'v v.imshad fiorfi the bus- daughters LueiHe and Pauline, Ernest M. Gardner, were held Sunday aft-'‘ n,>ss ut, iiosphcre of the hur*', ug Kandel, Harold Walter- and Joe ernoon at 2:00 o’clock at the Man- " orth ‘ ,n / , ' 1, >n still very gen- Logan of Ladoga spent Sunday with hattan church with interment in the erill *y C‘ v ® thei* sea's in street j Mrs. Madalene Long. Manhattan cemetery. Mrs. Gardner!'' 1 "* 1 , ' us ‘» ^ x.un.en and remove] Kenneth McCoy of Cincinnati spent died Friday moniing " in u, offfc the week-end with i,,.

C. C. Hurst who has been on the rick list for the past several days remains aliout the same. He is under the cure of a trained nurse at his home on east Franklin street. Paul Mahoney ha? gone to Logansport, where he will act as .superin-

tendent of the laigansport branch of R ut they nhij

the 0. and I. Stone Quarry. Mr. Mahoney will soon remove his fam-

ily to that cky.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sage of South Beml and George Sage of Vincennes, have returned to their home after -pending the week-end with their parents Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sage,

noithegst of town.

1 building elevat ;r«.

I and Mrs. J. E McCoy.

parents, Mr.

Vitamines aplenty and food essentials in abundance will be found in a simple ration for growing chicks that can be prepared at home, says the Blue Valley Creamery Institute, by combining milk, yellow corn, middlings, bone meal, oyster shell and salt in certain proportions. But no single ingredient can be left out, warns the Institute, because it takes all of them in combination to produce the

best results.

on this particular mhtuM > in Wiscon In where lU) were first fnrmulatef |l College >4' tgricukw*. lent home mixture ground yellow com, F middlings, 5 lbs. ehk , k-»ia^| 5 pound? chick-site high-grade limestone, will all mixed together th nothing t" 'bink hut surf! for : be find four to •* chick's life. The dry mash cin P *•! accessible to tile chick'if l in a small in cmmHM tern iioi 1" 1 I iquiit essential part of the rslief be k«*|it, •"iireii. in

Splendid results have been attained tr °ugli-.

Dodge Brothe-rs Victory /Si

How 3o you test a motor c* r? a ,/wrf the fiot tot yo“ »prSy 10 f . . . Then drive The Victory Su,***^ ito cIum ia *o fart. ... I* ac ? t ' ,r conudrration? . . . 5 to 2A tmlm to j,, **. / -10 to 45 mile* in 13Vi rtcond*- W* paralleled atory of Victory pu*-up. Are you interested in economy? • f gallon at 25 miles per hour t» sumption for this famous Si* • ’ ’ Head room e^ual to any—superior j 1 its class. Wider seats—more leg roouc And a beauty! Rakish and tr * 01 . upholstered, beautdully lacquered J — lomorrow’i style with l>odge A car that you should try out - ^ ^ at the wheel. PJ* ^ Coape, $1041; 4-door Sedan, fjlft SeZm, til 70; Deluxe 4-p*»-Sport Sedan, $1291—f o. b Do*** H. A. SHERRIU'

fetal

KftfMBammtam