The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 July 1928 — Page 4

THE H REENC'AHTTTE H’ATITf B'AHNEB. MONDAY, JULY 23,192$.

S;d>

S-^ sV

M W PI RSES AND HAND B\fiS.

Clever New Styles in hand hugs! I an». Blacks, (Jrays, Blue, linen, Bed I he imporUnt

CHEMISTS URGE

cnslume Accessory

$2.98

WIDE PUBLICITY AND TOLERANCE

i \

“II Ih Smart To tie Sunburned And Quite Modern To Say The Least!”

INSTITUTE MEETING IN CHICAGO TO FOSTER SCIENTIFIC UNDERSTANDING.

0 BE MODERN AND ABSOM TEI.V CORBE< T ONE inusl v*eur sleeveless dresses with low necks— whether it he :i sport frock of Hanot I, a street dress of cotton, or tin informal dress of silk. Why? The answer is simply this. 1 he dark hrown sunhurn makes an attractive contrast with the summery frock of a pastel

,, EVANSTON, III., Julj 28. (1 P) J Popular kitowledge of the BManing ol (. science, “to romoTO Intoloranee and ^ create a ne .v undet -landing',” wn J|nounced as the major aim of the new ♦ i. ti.l.tr . I ( hemi-t i y of the Alt ' $ can ( !) 'mical society, whii 1 open .1 i< ^ f )ur wetk- meeting here tony. •"huties I). Hurd of Northwest! ni ! Cmve .ify was appointed -tcretnry o! [Uh< 1 ! ■' nte foi I A-'ct '/ the features of the instltuto will he discussions by Dr. W. K. E»nIlev of t.ne U. S. Bureau of Standards, i W ashitipton, on the results of an < - jtensiv survey on the industrial utii - (r.ation of farm wastes wh!<li he !tus been directing for the Deportment nl Commerce. G. M. Rommel, New York d/t : c.i|tttral economist, also will lecture abt’Ut faun waste.

\ ors Company, who has been made chairman of the Smith committee has a heatt full and overflowing with -wmpathy for the farmers of the country, but his environment does not ! sustain that thought. Mr. Raskob is of the hard pavements, and his only ; knowledge of"farm pioblems has been I gathered in Wall Street, where he has I been playing wit bulls ond hears. The suggestion that Owen P. Young, of the General Electric Company is the Smith < hf ice for governor of New York also brings another man

CALL OF OPEN ROAD BECKONS WOMAN OF 60

V0NCASTL

**

Kf

TODAY —TUESDAY ADM.: 1(| (

%

HAVING RAISED IK CHILDREN, SHE DEVOTES REST OF LIFE TO HITCH HIKING.

PENDLETON, Ore., July 23 (UP)

m .sch .in uis" ... ..fi- • ^jtpd sixteen children—13 P"-'-'; W . h : , h “ f I. fn.l ihre, C.m.li..

canyons i- confinoil to those in down-

| town New York, created by the high ] buildings, and whose farming activities are of the Park Avenue window box variety. The Democrats in this case, after weeping over the plight of the farm, must be congratulated on their courage or bravado in their selection of expert on city movements, even While they are trying to dry the

farm tears.

$5,110 $9.95 & $15.

Tlii'Of* lYice (11'OUps of SuniijKT I)ross Stylos

S. C. FREVO CO.

I Hll DREVS II A A A I I HE INDIANA STATE EAIR SEPT. 1ST.

'Phis year at the Indiana State Fair which will he held! September 1st to Bth, all children under the age of twelve will be admitted free on Saturday, Neptmeber I'*., without ticketwhich have been rt«|Ul'red in the past. All children under twelve mu.-t !»• at companied by their parents or other ft-ponsible mlults.

[ndian.'t State Fair.

Don’t forget that all children under twelve years of age are admitted free on Saturday, September 1st, and on the following days all children ovet seven an I under twelve are admitted

for fee of 25c.

Other speakers will he H. T. HerI rick of the U. S. Department of Agi riculture, G. J. E-selen, Boston, H. G. Knight, Washington, S. Miner, Chicago, A. S. Richardson, Ivorydale, |Ohio, G. A. Richter, Berlin, N. II.. il’iof. 0. I!. Sweeney, Iowa State College, A. W. Schorger, Madison, Wi ., and K. W. Thatcher, president of ' Massachusetts Agricultural college. “Chemist, and, in fact, the entire T body of scientific men and women, f; who are coming to be known as the « “Fifth Estate”, eompo e m mall a J [fraction of the world's population and flare wrapped in -o much of apparent ♦ mystery, that the nitts-e of the pen >91 pie have relatively little aecin at. _! knowledge of their mission,” said Dr. j Frank C. Whitmore, chairman of the Division of Chemistry and Chemical Technology of the National Research Council, who has been appointed di-

rector of the Institute.

ANCIENT MAN NOT SO DUMB BRITON SAYS

boys and three girls

Erwin, 00, decided to spend her remaining years seeing the country in the most approved summer tourist

style—.hitch-.kiking.

Mrs. Erwin passed through Pen- i illeton recently on the first lap of another tour through the states. “The life of a wanderer is good enough for me,” Mrs. Ft win told city officials when she arrived from Spokane. “The open highway is my

home.

rides? Say,

log," the

Ctll.EIT TOR HFE1EYES ( AYE ART MIOAV' I IRST OE RA< K HAD HIGH MENTALITY.

STI DIES FARM PRORI.EM

This will he one of the big days, as ell club hoys and gjitls show their exhibits on that day. Every parent should be interested! enough in his children to have them at the fairground- for this day to watch the other youngsters' exhibit their calves, pigs and other animals and articles. There are many children in club work. It is one of the givatest shows the Indiana State Fair Ka- when all these hoy- atnl girls come in with their ex-1 ^ hibits. There were isver 2,KUii entries last year in club work, which has increased to this numlM-r in the past

four or five years.

This year there should be tit least •l.lkltt in club work as there are over 17,ldhi hoys and girls in the state of Indiana who arc working in and with the diffeient club departments and no

WASHINGTON, D. C„ July 23.— The farm problem has b»*en written down tit the top of the column of Mr. Hoover' memoranda and already h* he hu> given a veiy considerable aI mount of time to gathering the views of those who are able to speak with . uhotrity on this matter. While it is true he has not boldly promised the ' I at met - a did Governor Smith that ;f elected he would move at once with or without the con-ent of Congress, instead he ha been working to sahicongressionul sentiment, so something actual and effective can be done. The situation will call for the best that is in him, hut there is no worry that he will not be equal to it.

His farm knowledge is real and genuine and he ha- long been known to hold tite opinion that an adjustant 'an only he -ecured if the people of the country as a whole go to it uni-

where in the -tate can'they get a bet-

ter line on the ptogressivenes.- in the ledly in man fashion. That is what he

state of all lines as they can at the is doing.

“Indeed,” he said, workers in the different fields of chemistry itself | possess too little information about their science as a whole, so highly organized has it become and so thoroughly systematic research displaced the garret genius. “Several agencies have contribute') in recent years toward a better understanding by the layman of the problems and results of the chemist. This understanding, however, is still far from ideal; therefore, the Institute of Chemistry accepts this phase of work as one of its chief problems. Featuring the Institute’s sessions, it was announced today, will he a series of lectures on “The Discovery of the Elements" by Prof. B. S. Hopkins, University of Illinois. "The history of the discovery of these !I0 forms of matter, of which everything material in the universe imade, contains many interesting and dramatic episodes," Dr. Hopkins says. Some of his subjects will lie; “Elements Known to the Ancients"; “Discovery of Elements by Accident”; “Discovery of Elements by the Spectroscope Including Helium"; and "The Prediction of Elements before Their

Discovery."

OR tO i/% H%

was hj in minced (/

WWn the Victory Mouth* ago it was the talk of the town. It was a great ear then; it U an eve/» gr< ear now. It hns mIihmI the lent, F.aeii nazMa ha* seen a kiihatantial inereaae in Vie

Six sale*.

luuCj rtow!

Mot because of what we have Keen saying (W < ■U months. Or hceaimeof what we say now, '/ But beeause of what the Virtory Sii is. Jf The •nap|tie*t. Best looking. s|M'e<lie«t ear In | Ha class. A ear you should try out—now— ' yourself at thn wheel. uow- -

Touring t ar or Roadster, »9«5; Coupe, SIO.I.*,, I door Sedan. * I tl't.",; DeEuxe Sedan, *11711;’ Dcl.uxe l-passetiger ( onpe, *11711; Spurt Road.' »ler, *I2I.'>: Sport Sedan, $1295—f, o. h. Detroit

H. A. Sherrill

AN OLD-TIMER. TERRE HAUTE, July 23. (UPl — The fuel that "Old Dobbin" still holds his own despite this fast age of automobile and gu-nline is proven by the fact that V. T. Davi-, the -4-W»wn> keiidin^- htwViTfiith who was ".I years old last June, and his two >oiis, still make a living at shoeing horses. Davis, who shod ids ftr-t her o when he was 12 years old is still in the prime of his life and can still -hoe 12 horses a day, according to his 'Otis Ed and Bud. The elder Davis -ays he has lieen in the blacksmith business for K3 years and thinks it is the fine.-t profession there is. The -hop where Davis has his business has been established about .Vi years. Up until three years ago it was known as the “Old pete Kiser” shop, and had been in existance ,'.0 years. When Davi* took it over sign telling its age was hung in front of it. Davis say- he ha- never been kicked by a horse or mule in the whole ctiteer. At one time he established lecord by putting on 2K2 shoes in one duy. “Five years ago I drove a horse nil the way from Hot Springs Arkansas to Terre Haute,” he boa-ted. “h took me Ih days. | camped out at night and hud more fun than any automobile tourists.” Davis has hud a .-hop in Terre Haute •luting most of his life time hut ha done some work in other cities. He shod “The Fount” and “Miss Banner feed,” two famous horses down it Memphis, he said.

MANCHESTER, Eng., July 23. II P) Sir William Boyd Dawkins recently presented to the Manchester City Art Gallery a collection of drawings and wall I'uwtings, put togeth •t by himself, which he claims to ■ rove the high mentality of man when he first appeared on earth. Discussing the-' primitive wielder* of paint and pale'te, Sir William sayhey* lived in the Pleistocene Period when the continent of Europe ineltidd the British Isles, and was joined to Africa by two tracts of land now •overed by the shallower waters of the Straits of Gibraltar and by the sea between Si ily, Malta and Cape Bon. “He appeared,” he says, “toward the dose of the period bringing his irt with him, and we lose sight of tint during th great geographical •hanges by which Europe attained its iresent outline and the British Isles became separated from the Continent in a past far too remote to be mea--iired in years. “He may have retreated with the reindeer and the musk sheep northwards and he represented by the l'>kimi s, or he may have been absorbed into the lh<rc or Mediterranean race >f the succeeding Neolithic Period, he first on record of u long series of migration to which we owe the greater part of the population of Europe.” Casts of primitive objects, taken I'm original' in various European ni-eums, col re.I and prepared hy .'ir William ml Eady Boyd Duwkinne included in the collection. There ire also mural frescoes and engravngs from the works of Professor Breuil.

“Easy to get

like falling off a

hiker laughed.

Mrs. Erwin said she experienced! many interesting adventures while touring the country. She has been in nearly every state and Mexico. Expenses are the most trivial pail of hitch-hiking, Mrs. Erwin believes. And th illustrate this, the hiker said she mode a trp from Calexico, Mex., to Kentucky, coveting fourteen states in 23 days, at an expense of $25. Another trip from Portland, Ote., to Great Falls, Mont., was completed in a week at a cost of only 155

cents.

“'C1 ««*

di- j the

TO HONOR CARRANZA. WASHINGTON, July 23.—Hy reetion of President Coolidge

Washington government today com-, plcted arrangements to pay homage officially to Sapt. Emilio Carranza, Mexican air ace, and the high pur-1 poses of international amity for which he freely gave his life. The body of | the aviator will he carried hack to | his native land by train and not aboard the battleship Florida, which had been placed at the disposal of the Mexican government hy Presi-

dent Coolidge.

11 tern

uin

lerilrehf

A

Authentically portraying in

breath-taking screen action this wort j loved author’s best known and most thri Th

love story!

the mystic .Epths of a mighty forest!

( LI It ( AMP OPENS INDIANAPOLIS, July 23. (UPl— Central Indiana’s first summer camp for I 11 boy 1 aipl girls will open on Monday July 23 at the State Fair ground- and continue through Friday. Five day ■ of entertainment and in--truction by workers in the extension lepartment . f Purdue University are

scheduled.

At least E',0 hoys and girls are expected, A-sistant Marion CourttS’ Agent t . ,) Murphy estimated today while thi- number probably will he doubled if ftum land is to wet to

work eatly next week.

Farmers are so far behind due to ontinued r. ms that th*- attendance is

expected

Both during the time the casket remains in New York before it is placed aboard the train anil when it is turned over to the keeping of his Mexican comrades, full military and naval honors will be accorded the air hero hy the army and navy of the United States.

The offer from President Coolidge to President Calles of Mexico, placing the Florida at the disposal of the Mexican government as a funeral ship, went direct from the summer White House in Wisconsin to the City of Mexico.

rrs

IUI|I renl 1 th >t I touli

win:ai exchange

tion. Ijihratory cx|iwii.«iL

Several fainter- are taking advant- the Purkoff varii ly t» irrl

ar<“

With it went the personal condolences of President Coolidge and at the same time Secretary Kellogg and Secretary Davis of the War Department made public their expressions of sympathy and of admiration for the flier, which were telegraphed respectively to th« Mexican foreign minister and the minister of war.

Secretary Kellogg took a deep personal interest in seeing that every agency of the American government was brought into play which could assist in making clear to the government and people of Mexico not only the sympathy of the American people in Mexico’s hour of sorrow hut their deep appreciation of the spirit of friendship and good will which prompted ( apt. Carranza to make his flight to the United States.

To that end orders were transmitted hy the War Department to Maj. Gen. Hanson Ely at New York

. , „ ,, Hat night that the aviator’s body he

to be cut lower than it was „ urroundwl with

first hoped.

Boy ' an. girls from Marion, Morgan, Haiico. k and Hamilton counties *ill arrive .-nly Monday. They will • amp the five days’ at the Fair grounds, the hoys’ being housed in the dormitory and the girls in the 1101111111111 at the hor-e show building. I he cooking will he done in the camp kitchen. .

AI I OVER INDIAN A

BLOOMINGTON— Thomas H. Hughes, M, Linton, Ind., recently wa arrested hy a Monon detective for “humming” a fMe in u box cur, the aged man who is us spry us a young ter, told loc(il officers that he once saved a Morfm train from being wreck' Hughe* said he was on hi- way to lie'lford and Petersburg. He was not n> rested by the officer.

v/ieVictoR-Y Six

u y o o o a e

BROTHERS

ALM' ng »tam * - 1" » , I He U'MO* M* » lo Jlt

DEMA|V LEADERS WORRY WASHINGTON, I). C., July 2.!.— F arm leuoers w ho have been pointing to Cover not Smith a- the Moses to lead the agiicultiirists into the promised luiul, are more than a little worried over the latest denmnstiation in the Democratic camp. It may Ire

HAMMOND — The giant all-metal monoplane, “Miss Hammond”, owned by the Betz Air Lines of this city, is 1 iking part in an elaborate exploltuinn °f aviition at Kansas City, Mo., this week.

that Mr. Raskob, of the General Mot-j October

MARION Frank ileed, of this 1 ity, i one of the few posaers of tick••i to the Columbian World's Fair Exposition ho|,| jo Chicago in 1H05. Hood ha- a ticket which wa- good lor admission only on Chicago Day,

military guard of

honor atnl that preparations he made to extend in connection with its return to Mexico the military ceremonies Irefitting the young flier’s rank in the army of his country and his high place among the aviators of

the world.

Arrangements for the military guard in New York and for the additional soldierly ceremonies by comrades of the American army will be left to Gen. Ely. The Washington government will he represented, however by a personal representative of Secretary Kellogg, still to be named, and also by high officials of both the military and naval services who are planning to attend.

The State Department was notified last night by Ambassador Teilez of Mexico he had received a message from his government expressing appreciation of the offer of the battleship to transport the air hero’s body to Mexico but declining the proposal. The message declared that the Mexican government was desirous of having the hotly transported hy rail on a special train to Laredo, Tex., where it will he met by a Mexican military mission which will escort it to the City of Mexico.

9. Dl!t3.

Full military honors will mark the funeral of the flier to be held in New York city next Wednesday under the plans made public by the War Department.

age of the wheat exchange and listing the rarities and the amount th:.t they will have available for seed with the County Agent. Others are urged to take advantage of this opportunity so that the good wheat pro- • lueed in the county can he kept here for seed. Seveial pieces of wheat were inspected for certification by I’rof. Robbins of Purdue University, a representative of the Indiana Corn Growets Association. The field at the time of inspection wete found to he in good condition and prospects were fine foi a good quality of seed. Prof. Robbins said the seen inspected were .-ome of the liest he had inspected in

the state.

an

t

soft wheat clii'sifiratii. IM S Ilf Put kill'! a • ■ ■ t wheat they sulil .jd yir 9 the Cential Indim .<■ (i lliW i-l A M,7s ( j | and sold as :i 'Pfat n >w

N'T vn- MIAA A K'sX ‘-Xim l aNNOVW.B in La 1ND1ANAP0US, J om nouncement of t'" t' 1 ‘ •

H. Klinger as stut . American Ir; :

I

ant

A numlier of farmers are at a loss to know about the Michakoff and Purkoff varieties. Purdue University, orginators of both the Purkoff and MiihaKidT wheats recommend them very highly, because experimental plots over a series of years show that the.-i two varieties are the most winter hardy and heaviest yielders for Indiana. Both varieties have caused considerable comment hy the Indiana Millers Association and the Central

ville, to the - ' * Frank M. McHalr. state Legion ivnrunder, meeting of th' w

mittee of the U- in l"' 1 ’’’ ■' u!

Klinger, who

me ;d

II

AD m

u

ant since Ms! X I!'-' 1 . t'" ! f

"

■ ru

eept a pos/r "'hh tin 11 ■■ ufacturing Cnmpany 1

and wi

concern the tate "!

Indiana Soft Whoe; Growers Associa- recently.

BIG-HEADED < User COLUMBUS, Sell, I ac

— A head of • tat inches in circumPi 1 e ing eight pounds ■ tic

GRANADA

qt -lei n

I

TonifcHI ToN'on

A DM.: iM^rit

JACK HOLT

FRED

KOHL

"TTiIstTs '' I NEWS 1