The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 June 1928 — Page 2
THE GREENCA3TEE DMET fe'ANNER, MONDAY, JUNE 25, 192S.
THB DAILY BAJDIBn
1 Born to Mr. and Mr?. Roy L.
I Neely, a daughter.
Phone All 4 Social Items To 95. Business Women Meet. Mr. Harrison is editor aud publisher
, of the Danville Press.
A woman president of u railro id, a Mr HarTi5on has close
friends in Greeneastle. He is a grad-
wonuin vice-pre-ident ■ ' a steam hip company, a woman ticket agent and various other lending lights of the transportation world, all of then\ of the feminine persuasion, will be speakers at the 10th annual convention of the National Federation; of Business and Professional Woman's clubs in New Orleans July 8 to 14, inclusive. I
Entered In the Poet Office et Green<*nstle, IndlMnn, ae second clans mall matter, lender the act of March 8. 1870. Sahncrfpttom price. 10 sente pee week.
Personal And Local News
Me- A NEW EXPERIMENT |It is this fellowship with Jesus Christ The utility of radio in maintaining 1 and the Father that must ultimately communication for signaling and oth- j solve our vexed problems of race reBorn to Mr. and Mr-\ Ira Hutches-; er purpoges between the engine alid) lations.
on, a daughter, June. J caboose of long freight trains will be! In the midst of the Gary High
Mrs. Edwin Hunt, of Indianapolis, submitted to the test of a practical is the guest of Mrs. Will Graham 1 trial, under actual working conditions
this week.
uate of DePauw university, a member of the board of trustees and active in all its interests.
+ + •► + + +
Married Here Sunday.
Miss Viola Chiids of this city and Herman G. Magill of Owen Co., wen' united in marriage Sunday afternoon at 2:.d0 o’clock at an open church
Mrs. Ella Maxwell of Fairfield, la., is visiting her sister, Mrs. Edward K. Bartlett. Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Stewart have returned from a week’s visit in Little Rock Arkansas.
by the Pennsylvania railroad. For this purpose a demonstration run with an experimentally radio-equipped train w ill he made tomorrow from Altoona, Pa., to Pittsburgh, Pa. The start will be at 8:30 a. m., and 0 to 7 hour.-- will be devoted to the run.
Miss Beulah Yeager left Sunday to attend the summer school of Chi-
cago University.
Mrs. Proebe E. Clark of Nashville, wec j ( jj n ^ a t the Nazarene Church. The Tenn., who operates the 1!>-mile trail- a ]( ( . r 0 f |b,> church was deconjied
Rev. Henry McLean has gone to | Fort Wayne on a business trip. Charles Sanders has gone to Selina
Kansas for an extended visit. i • .i_ » ^ ai, ..
; is the guest of his aunt Mrs. Alex
Mrs. Homer Lucas and Mrs. Tom j Lockridge on West Walnut Street.
Flint were in Roachdale Sunday.
rond known as the Tennessee, Kentucky A Northern, will discourse Cipon the trials of a female railroad president. Mrs. C. Baker Clotworthy, ’vicepresident of the Baltimore St earn Packet Co., who probably knows as much as woman in America pbout the steamship business, will also have u story to tell of the opportunities open to women in the steamship world. Helen Raddy of New Orleans, ticket agent for the Missouri 1*00160, will draw upon her own experiences
in baskets of flowers. Mrs. Richard Whelan furnished the music.
•i' 4 1 + + ♦ ♦
P. E. O. Activities. The P. E. O. Sisterhood of Indiana closed an inspiring convention at the Severin Hotel in Indianapolis Thursday. Reports were given of the National Educational Fund which now totals almost half a million dollars. From this fund alone, over 2,000 girls have been aided in securing an education—an average over 100 a year.
to prove that being a ticket agent Is '| Uo Sisterhood also owns in Nevada,
not necessarily exclusively a mascu-
line function.
Other speakers at this round table at which leading transportation women in all parts of the United States will gather are Miss Myrtle Miles of New York City, supervisor, of the woman’.- bureau of the department of agricultural relations of the New York Central railroad; Miss Margaret Talbot Stevens of Baltimore, eis.-ociate editor of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Magazine; Mrs. Mary 1.. Brandon of West Palm Beach, Fla., head of the Brandon Transfer & Storage , Co., and Mrs. Julius Freeman of Bal-
Mi senri, a Junior College of splen-
did reputation.
Within the las’ two years P. E. Os have Luiit and furnisned on the campus of Iowa Wesleyan College, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, a memorial libraiy, in mem .ry of the seven women who founded the P. E. O. Sisterhood in
1KG.
The In liana State Chapter adopt'd a resolute n made by the preaKlii.t, Mrs. Jessie Moore Hawkins, to estaolish a trust amt welfare fund to ba use<| for a P. E. O. home. Th? state convention was mr.de up of delega’cs fr m ej h 11 the fifteen eff’n ers, ami of many visiting members. ALncugh
timore, manager of the travol bureau
of the Merchants’ & Miners’ Trans-j the policy of this great int ,'national
portation company. | sisterhood is grow slowly, hoih R-
„ . - i ca, l>' un »* internationally, it now ha* Harrison Gilmore Medding ■ n , en , berslli}) of }5 000 Mr>. Lucille H. Gilmore of Chicago] ^.j.4. + 4. an 1 John H. Harrison of Danville, 111. Kxc'cutive Hoard Meeting,
were married in Chicago. IB.. Satur- 1 ’j- he Fifth District of Business and day evening at St. Jame- Methodist Prfessional Women’s clubs, which in - Episcopal Church, (Bishop Edwin H.j t .] u ,| t , s t h e Greeneastle chapter, is Hughes officiating. Mrs. Gilmore ha- taking a prominent place in the state lived in Chicago foi m vend years and i organization. At a meeting of the exis a well known newspaper woman, ecutive board, district and club direcShe has been manager of the western tors, at the Hotel Lincoln in Inuiana-
w.fice of the Editor and Publisher, 0 and represented several trade paper-. (Continued on Page 4.)
Mrs. Arthur Seeger of St. Louis is the gue-t of Mrs. W. F. Swahlen. Mrs. Samuel Hod-shire of Craw- I fordsville is visiting relatives in this
city.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Vandevier and son, Charles were in Indianapoli*' Sunday. Miss Mae Allen of Gary spent the week-end in Greeneastle with relatives. . The Farmers Co-operative Association held a business meeting Saturday evening.
TOWELS ARE LARGER
Linen towels are affected by changing fa hion as well as other
conspicuous household accessories.
George Pasfieki of Springfield, 111., j'| u . present tendency in linen face
towels is toward a larger size than in the immediate post-war years when everything—table clothes, napkins, etc.,—seemed to run to diminutiveness. The present popular size is about 20 to 36 inches, a definite change from the dinky handkerchief towel which was no more than an
oimtinent for the rack.
Miss Francis Rector left Sunday for the University of Southern California where she wdll attend the summer
session.
Wedne-day afternoon at 4:30 Prof, 'an 1 Amman Thompson will give an argan lecital in Meharry Hall. Every
one is invited.
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Brown spent Sunday at Camp Bedford, visiting
spending two |
School strike last fall, the Northwest Indiana Conference was met in its annual session in First Church, Gary. A great service of song had been planned for one of the evening sessions, in which the choir from one of the colored churches of the city was to participate with the choir of First Church. There was much doubt expressed as to what might happen to this musicale under the circumstances. Would the young High School | students in the First Church choir j mor ' jwalk into the service in company with the young folks in the colored choir? When the hour of service arrived, oil" or two of the very leaders of the strike were seen maching into that church side by side with their brothers in black. Their explanation was. "In the church we must act like Christians.” Where fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Chris’, prevails, the color line can not 1m drawn to the exclusion of any race,
LADIES’ pajamas
Everett Hurst of visitors in Green-
Promoting Human Welfare
The Standard Oil Company (Indiana), like many another American business institution, nricuiiized primarily for profit, is an agency for human welfare. Here in America we have found a fundamental and constructive way of adding to human happiness. Enlightened business has been the instrument by which better conditions for working and living have been created. Science in cooperation with business has made its enormous contributions to human comfort and pleasure. Never in the history of the world has tiie average man'’ known such a standard of living as he enjoys today in America. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is one of the business institutions that has heltx*d to bring this about. Efficient methods, scientific research, economical production on a vast scale, the rigid elimination of waste enable tins Company to produce from crude oil the utmost in useful commodities of servk-e to man. Increasing costs of production have been so effectively offset by increasing efficiency of oixration, that prices of petroleum products have maintained a lower level than any oilier commodity in general use. Standard Oil Company (Indiana) products may be secured at frequent intervals at reasonable prices anywhere witliin ten Middle Western states. In this business of rendering the public useful ■ervice, of making it* dependable products available to everyone everywhere in the Middle West, the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) gives employment to 26,558 people. The welfare of its employes is a chief concern of this Company. Numerous measures instituted for their benefit assure them of their Company's interest and cooperation at alt tunes of encouragement in prosperity—of help in time of trouble. They work together effectively with unity of purpose and a common loyalty. Each individual realizes that his opportunities are limited oily by his ability, ambition and effort, lie always is conscious that he is a part of an organisation in which human relationships are valued. The work of this Company represents a tremendous investment of human effort—a direct investment on the part of 26,558 employes an indirect investment of effort on the part of 56,662 shareholders who for the most part have personally earned and savedythe money paid for stock. These shareholders con* from all walks of life and not one owns more than 5k', of the total. In the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) this human effort- aided by science and mechanical power—has been made to yield maximum returns In the satisfying of man’s wants.
Standard Oil Company (Indiana) General Office: Standard Oil Building 910 So. Michigan Avenue, Chicago 4823
Dr. and Mrs. Cloverdale weie castle Sunday.
K. S. Flint is in South St. Paul buying cattle in interest of Putnam
County fanners.
Band practice tonight at 7:30 o’clock. All members requested to be
present on time.
Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Wagner spent the week-end in Graysville with Mr. and Mr-. W. A. Veil. Mrs. Fred Lewman and -on and W. D. Lovett of Roachdale -pent Satur lay in Greeneastle. Mrs. Roy Bray is moving to Princeton where her husband has been located for some time. Kermit Todd, and Thomas Vandevier were in Indianapolis Sunday and atended the Indiana Theatre. Miss Loiena Lovett of Indianapolis spent Sunday here with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Stoner, Northwood. Mr. and Mrs. Mure! Davis returned Sunday from a visit with friends and relatives in Terre Haute. H. S. Wright and Miss Louise Poling of Indianapolis spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. K. 1. Todd. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth I. Todd, Miss Louise Poling and H. S. Wright motored to Indianapolis Sunday evening. Roy Brackney is improving nicely at the County Hospital after an operation which he underwent a week
ago.
Mr . Nellie Anderson and Mrs. Henry Clay I^ewis have taken rooms with Mis. A. B. Phillips for tlie sum-
er.
Miss Sylvia Monnett has returned to her home after spending the weekend with Miss Mable Monnett in In-
dianapolis.
Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Marshall, Mr. and Mn. Chas. E. Cooper spent Sunday in Ladoga with Mr. and Mrs. J.
K. Albin.
Mrs. Rowena Smith of Indianapolis has left her home in that city for an
extended visit in
with relatives.
REV. TAYLOR
IS SPEAKER AT UNION SERVICE
(Continued from page l).
their sons, who are weeks at the camp.
Mr. and Mrs. ( harles Ewan left Sunday for New York City, where they will spend *everal days with Mr. and Mrs. F.arl Ewan. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Bartlett of Ft. Madison, Iowa, have returned home after a brief visit at the home of their son, Prof. E. R. Bartlett. Frank Young, who has been visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Young, left Sunday for Los Angeles where he is employed by the Southern California Edison Company. Eugene Dixson of Brazil, who \^a> iujuied at the Cement Plant some time ago when he fell several feet and sustained a frat-lured knee, is slowly improving at the County Hospital and will soon be able to be re-
! moved to his home.
Prof. L. E. Mitchell of DePauw uni- ( versity, president of Putnam County Sunday schobl association and active 1 member of the Greeneastle church, | spoke last night at First Baptist I church, Terre Haute, on the “Signifi-
cance of the Church.”
Fiancis Hightower, of Crawfordsville, claimed an abandoned Ford
roadster which was found by the po- , , , lice early Mom ay morning on south! ‘ ,me ’ ° 1 ’ tul ln *f
, , . . u- .it m -e- » patch under a boiling July sun
Jackson street. Hightower told Chiet Braden that he had run out of oil and had been forced to leave the car at
the side of the road.
Samuel E. Johnston of this city recently .sent his brother, Dr. M. A. Johnston of Oaktown, a copy of The Banner, containing the obituary of his wife, and he received a letter afterWriiils, saying the paper had been filed away by Dr. Johnston, along with a copy of The Banner published 70 yeur- ago, currying the obituary of their father. Their father was killed by a tiuin at Cloverdale, while on a business trip there from his
home near this city.
Funeral services for John Pittenget 13, son of Rev. and Mrs. W. Earl PiUenger, who was killed when a inlerurbun car struck the auto in which tie was lining, were held from the Methodist Church at Muncie at 2 o’clock Monday afternoon. The victim was a grand.M.n of Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Burnside. They went to Muncie Sut-
ytrangely warmed, and lie knew that God was his forgiving Father ami lie
was God’s child.
Closely allied to this quickened understanding of God’s Fatherhood will be a quickened appreciation of our sonship. If God is in any real sense our Father, we are in an equally real sense his children. Any process whereby our appreciation of God’s Fatherhood is enhanced, must of necessity magnify our self-esteem. We are children of God. However humble and restricted our present estate, we are heirs of God and joint-heirs with Jesus Christ. What John wrote in another connection is true here, “Beloved, now are we the children of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be, but we know that when he shall appear, we shall be like Him.” It is not what we are, but what we are destined to become which gives us occasion for rejoicing. It was no mere idle sentiment that prompted that aged parishoner of :i fellow-minister of mine, poor, bent,
in his little potato
to
sing as he hoed— “I’m the child of a King, the child of
a King,
With Jesus my Savior, I’m the child
of a King.”
One can not long fellowship with Jesus Christ in his thinking and aspiring without being caught up into an enthusiastic appreciation of his
own inherent worth.
Following closely upon this quickened appreciation of God’s Fatherhood anil our sonship must come a growing appreciation of the fact of human brotherhood. One can not fellowship with Jesus Christ very long in his thinking and feeling and
-1
ft
< ft
111 attractive new prj
and patterns d God’s "whosoever will” reaches across Hl’Oadcloths ill Stl'l all barriers of race and color and an( J patterns S binds tog:ether in one blessed broth- \ ! , • • • . 0J erhood men and women from all the ^ BITipiIS Shorts races in a joyous “fellowship of Consisting Of bamld
kindred minds which is like to that
above.”
We have not gotten very far in an experience of fellowship with the Father and with his Son as long as we permit ourselves to he divided in to various more or less hostile denominational camps. Dr. S. Park , Cadman used to tell of two men in ’ a church he once served, who fought together and prayed separately. He
and step-ins, in stij of orchid, blue or peach <5j J. H. P1TCHF0
terested in acquiring other than may he described as possessioJ
did not look upon them as worthy ex- i a 1 the!
ponents of the sort of Christian fellowship in which he believed. l J o<- ■
ecures honesty, integrity, He does not wish to be an ture, ability, wisdom. He recoj that even with all these, hi- 1 incomplete since he ought to ack edge his obligation to a power him. Accordingly he adds Chr his life by professing hi- fai: him. So by a process of acci
. .... i he gathers that which is suimi.s
answer to the Master s patient pray- , , .
- ... , ,. . * f make him an equipped and roi
er in the hour of his passion, “Ho y • , , , .. . ' ’ “ f 1 individual.
Father, keep them m thy name which Xow arise8 a ( , UPstion whi(h th ° U hast * ,ven mr ’ that ma r b-! cull for a division of opi, „m as
answer. Does man retain w lal
was something in this fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ something greatly needed by all mankind. Therefore he set about it diligently to persuade others to enter into it with him. This was a most natural thing to do. When one has enjoyed the benefit of seme remedy for pain, he is always eager to acquaint all like sufferers with his proven remedy. If this fellowship with the Father ami with his Son is a reality with us as it was with John the evangelist, whh John Calvin, John
will continue to he the most efficient way of carrying forward our enter prise of promoting Christian brotherhood, but not if their ungodly rivnlries shall continue to generate hateful hostilities. To fellowship with the F'ather and with his Son Jesus Christ 1 is more and more to long for the
one, even as we are one."
John the evangelist thought there j takeg jnto his , ife?
ditions to the vaiiou ph-es nature, do they represent en( ment, do they become par of Or, as he adds, E there a proce subtraction going on at the time? Perhaps in the matter id sessions there is more pilimr upj on than in any other field. Jbnj success and then goes after motj amasses fortune.- and his mounts higher and higher, this principle is applied tn charj does man retain the qualities
.. . tioned previously ? For examd c. n .^a..'ii ‘....T'T. uu' ! honeKt y i* practiced in a parti
transaction, does he keep on that kind of busim - always 1
Campbell, and with other Christian leaders who have burned with a zeal to acquaint all mankind with the’ Father God and the Savior Christ, we like they will he eager to Include many in the gracious fellowship tha means so much to us. Charles Wesley, tlie great hymnist of the Wesleyan revival, voiced the clamorous de-
piring without having his h( , art of every true sharer in this glor
strangely warmed toward all mankind. There are no racial and color lines drawn with Him. The fact that the Jews had no dealings with the Samaritans could not prevent Jesus from seeking to redeem to a life of honor and beauty and loyalty to her heavenly Father and his Father that wretched Samaritan woman whom he
urday immediately after receiving chanced to meet at Jacob’s well,
word of the accident in which two other boys and the mother of one of
Wichita, Kansas, | b() y g aRo killed.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Shepperd and on of Drum right, Oklahoma, are spending this week with Mr. and
Mis. G. R. Shepperd.
I*aul Wiight is taking a week's vacation from the Owl Drug Store. Mr. and Mrs. Wright and son motored to Bridgeton Sunday to visit with
relatives for a few days.
The Finance Committee of the Putnam County Fair Association will hold a meeting .Monday evening at 7:30 o’clock in the County Agent’s
office.
Darnell Denman of Chcago
Richard Denman of New York left thin morning for their homes after visiting here with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. L. Denman.
The tent meetings which have been well attended and reaching many, will continue this week at Commercial Place. Mrs. Grace Black will be assisted by Mrs. Ray McClelland of
Clinton.
Miss Marian Stevens of Indianapolis was the week-end guest of her mother Mrs-. Charles Stevens. Mrs. Stevens will lie with Mrs. Otis Browning during the Summer at 410 blast Hanna Street. Alva Bryan, deputy sheriff, took Elmer Webb to the Indiana State reformatory at Penalton Monday. Webb was sentenced to one U> five years by acting judge John James in the Putnam circuit court last week for escaping the Penal Farm.
Mr and Mrs. J. B. Biggs were called to Indianapolis Wednesday by the death of their Grandson Joseph Meyeis. Funeral ervices for Jolieph Meyer- aged 24, Indianapolis Musician and a former member of the Indianapolis News Boy's Band who died at his home 1848 Quill St., Tuesday was held at the home Friday at 2 p. m. with burial in Crown Hill Cemeieiy, the Kev. Thomas J. Hart, pastor of Barth Place M. E. Church officated . Mr. Meyers was born at Fllwood, hut came to Indianapolis when a boy, he attended the Indianapolis schools and the Boston School of Musand ic. He is survived by his paients Mr.
ami Mrs. Henry J. Meyers and two brotheis Wilbert and Jack Meyers ail of IndianaiMilis. Bruce Lane, living south of Bainbridge a short distance reports killing a dot at his home Friday night. The head was taken to Indianapoi • Saturday for examination for ruble-, but no report ha 1 Ftx’i received Monday. Mr Lane said the cmnial h;d bitten mm;oh us ‘ i? 1 - around unci lie killed it after he had failed to drive it away from his home. It was reported the animal had been fighting with every dog in Bain bridge with which it came in contact and it also tried to bite one or two children. The question now is whether there will be a wholesale epidemic of rabies in and around (Bainbridge is causing considerable uneasiness, and it will probably pay the residents there to be on the lookout for this disease if this dog was afflicted.
Group and racial and color barriers fall away where a genuine fellowship with Je-us Christ and with his Father is experienced. At the great Inter-Church Convention held in Roberts Park church during the progress of the Inter-church Missionary Movement, at u moment when the idealism of the assembly was running high, one of the leaders on the platform dared to start that familiar religious ditty, "Tlie Oldtime Religion is good enough for me.” The crowd joined in with a will. As the united voices of the many ceased, one lone voice was heard buck under the gallery, the voice of a colored woman wearing the garb of a deaconess, singing— “Makes me love every-body, makes me love every-body, Makes me love every-body, and its good enough for me.” The crowd joined with her on the chorus. Then she sang on alone— “Makes the black folks love de white folks, Makes the black folks love de white folks, Makes the black folks love de white folks. And it’s good enough for me.” The crowd joined with her even more lustily in the chorus. Then she sang
on—
“Makes the white folks love de black folks, Makes do white folks love de black folks, Make de white folks love de black folks, And its good enough for
me.”
By this time there were moist eyes in that crowd and a wonderous note of sympathy in their singing as they swung on into the chorus, “The Old time religion is good enough for me.”
ious fellowship of Christian believers, "0, that the world might taste and
see
The wonders of Hi* grace; The arms of Love that compass me, Would all mankind embrace.” “Happy if with my latest breath I may hut gasp his name; Preach him to all, and cry in death ‘Behold! behold! the Lamb’.”
In the Presbyterian Church Sunday morning the theme of the message was “Conserving Our Spiritual Gains," based on II John 1:8—“Look to yourselves, that ye lose not the things which we have wrought, but that ye receive a full reward." Students of the mind and body of man say that he is gifted with an acquis*
if a boy is taught truthfulis"? 1m* continue to abide b; that thl youth and maturity ? As one thl education delves into its n:un> jects, he should artually a<M store of knowledge all throueh When one receives Christ into life, he ought to retain him. I ed upon to exercise fai'.h. trual lief, hope once, he ought to
them.
There is really grave ilanger lowing any or all of to*** away from us. It is a trap? lose any of the nobler object! come into i ur experience. I yourselves that ye lose not the which we have wrought are words of a wise leader ami a| They are the admonition of * VI who teaches. To let go ■f''*'' conserving our gains is periMi one’s existence. A continuous glowing sp^r should be the aim of every 1 1 The disciples prayed Jesus for crease in faith. We ought to ulate the qualities and gia<' ' come ours through Christ
itive nature, that from childhood to
old age he seeks to accumulate ob- build up a fortune, man i jects within and beyond- his reach. | has already acquir'd 11111 ^ These objects are largidy in the mat- velop the Christian ll '’ _
erial world including such us gold, j his faith, belief, uu-. silver, houses, lands. He is also in-J gain more.
Add enjoyment to your trip Ea*t or West, giving you a delightful break In your Journey. C&B LINE STEAMERS Each Way Every Night Between Cleveland and Buffalo offer you untmnrcd facilulci. including l«r*». comfort- • l»!«atnrrroomt tliai insure* long night'«reire*hl«grleep-
iictllent dlni A trip you '
• r»!« storeroom* tliai tributes long night sretreshl Luxurious cabin*, wide decks, eacellent dining room hi, Court* -us sttcndsnts. A trip you will long
embet.
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■w $8.50
AUTOS CARRIED $6.50 AND UP Tb« Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Comyany Kw»* Slh Stroot l-ier t j ll Clevis*kI. Ohm
mm
iaiei**'**
•/*<
