The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 July 1928 — Page 1
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THE PAH.T BANKER
» ALL THE HOME NEWS • + HN1TED PRESS SERVICE • #♦++++++++++++*•
aRTV-SIX
GRKENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, JULY 30, 1928
No. 24(i.
MOOLS TO ®PEN HERE "SEPTEMBER 10
HIT AND RUN DRIVER CAUSES BAD ACCIDENT
;t filled
BISHOP liUOSE TO BE
AT BLOOMINGTON EUIDAY Bishop Gooi jfe K. Giosy, uitlil 1921 Pi-esident of DePauw university of Greencastle, urul since then Bishop of the M. E. church in Peking, China, 1 will be u guest of the men’s brothel-
hood of the local church, 4th and Washington street, Friday evening. (;| ,„ 1{(iK M , |M ., n XN|> ,, AM|LT
(. VKI lKl.lt Ol lTN( DAUWS 225 PI TNAM RESIDENTS
REV. BRUNER DELIVERS UNION SERMON SUNDAY
Remains. Vnd 1 He Filled Vt Board.
eencuBtle city school - will i the second Mondas in Sep un|r ) or the 10th, it is loporte.l. ’•‘a—i girding to indications, everyved t (|| i*. ready for the grand oilprovided the Second Ward =5now under construction, i. HI men are rushing the construe »rk, and W'alter Heath who contract, believes ho v. for Use when the fii a the morning of the loth. ., uilding will be under * (recording to the way it looks .mut all that remains to be I , get it covered, is to |. , hjnji|i on, as the dtlter wo. *®mpleted. Th# budding i lap ing on its final appearance be one of the best app* n • in the state, actonling ■ . it
ooks.
■aching staff is compIcD a
August 3, at ti:t)0 o’clock. All mem lieis of the men’s association and their fiiends will sit al liinnei aftei which the Bishop will speak to the general public in the auditorium of ' the church at 7:15 o’clock. He is a flu ent speaker and always attracts large crowds. A mission will be free. No - one knows the Chinese religion and political situation better than Bishop
I Gru-e. Bloomington World. RESIDENTS ARE
URGED 10 MAKE STREET REPAIRS
IN \\ KKl h (IN SI M E KdAll NORTH ni CITY.
DKIV EK
NK\ I K
STOPPEB
Vlr. Murphc Had Hard Time Getting Attention of Passing Motorists To Bring Injured To City.
PEOPLE LIVING <iN ( (il.LKG E VV EM E 1 KG Ell TO \1 VhE ( ONNEt I IONS SOON.
I’VVINt; Id
S I VIM
X l( I N
There Vre Some Sewer. Gas Viul VV aler ( onncctions That Should Made Bufer Paving Goes Down
Residents living on College Avenue are being uiged by city offici Is to
make all necessary water, gn~ and 'I' 1 ' ' 1 an ^ slll i<k
A hit and mn driver was the cause of a seiious accident Sunday evening about eight o’clock on state hoad l.’i north of Greencasth. Mr. and Mis. (ieorge Muiphy and Murphey’.- sistei' were driving north and were approach ing a culvert when another car which had just crossed the bridge turned in suddenly and struck the front end of Murphey’s car, tearing off the front wheel and causing the car to go over an embankment. The entire parti was sitting in thy front s* at when the accident occurred uitii all were injured. George Murphy was cut on the arm and hand almost losing one linger. Mrs. Mui phi iva - bruised and cut slightly and V'iss Murphy had an artery cut in her arm and other lacerations on her
body.
Murphy could not keep the car under control and it turned over in the
Two hundred and twenty-five residents and former residents of Putnam county attended the annual reunion and picnic at Garfield Park,
Sunday. A program of games, speech , ■ — leadings, music and a ba-ket din- |>\S|(IR OP ( HRRSTI.VN t HI R( H Her was airanged by Mrs. Una Hub DELIVERED INTERESTING bard, c hail man of the committee in SERMON Sl'ND.VV NIGHT,
charge of the outing. ! Tied Starr, superintendent of . .
chools at Noblesville a former * UlJhr1 ' ‘ HE RU K ”
Putnam county resMent, was one of' the principal speakers. Vlr. Rruuer Discussed Law
III. Edward Droofi Southport and Miss Judith ll^ip'i of (’hicugo, soloists, and Charles Gayer of Indianapolis, pianist, featured the musical selections. Officers of the association are Kiuce Lank', pie-idcnt, and Miss Caine L. Johnson, secretary.
En force-
mi nt And Duties of ( itizclis As Individuals.
Paul Doddridge Leaves Vincennes
VV I I I, KNOW \ (iRI I \( VS I LI. M V\ GETS I INI. POSITION IN JAMESTOWN, M V\ VoRK. The Vincennes Sun of Saturday, carried the following ay concerning Paul Doddridge, »oi -n-law of Mr. nd Mr.-. Jacob Kiefei who is well kn wn in Gi, eiieastU*: “Vincennes is losing on,- of its most
telephone pole.
active lenders in busu
eption. There was by the resignation
enterprises in
vacancy, sewer connections'at an early date,:™" P-le struck the top of the - 1 sale-mauag. ,
Mrs. because the street i- soon to be pave I ■'"'••'liing
the
the windshield and bending
Paul ■ f th+
ie- and civic P Oodilridge Knox 1.umber
, , , i , i lonipani, who is leaving the first of Ikkett Burns, and that will and to cut into the new concrete lm ' l,, l' dieniig wheel and dam-: to sile-manager of session street once it i- finished, doe- it con-i a *' t i' 1 ’' 1 <al ‘onsidei .ib y. (nji,,,) | umber dompany at Jam-
sidei able damage. 1 Th " lar th *’ wee, *- i l, " si ' 1 e town, V Y.
who is Those who are to need the utility loa, ‘ itt! 1 > " u ‘ l lm ‘ '' 11 “Mr. Ibnldridge foimally aieepted |»ol at In- conneetions, urnbahly are making Passing drivers and the injured peo M nt . w p 0 tioi t.idai The United plans to have the work done before ‘ ul '' out liy themsi lies, | U |j,|,,. r eompany consists of four the concrete is laid, but if they are '“ m b up to the road and Hag a pa.-s- lumber companie- arid three building not readv, it will probably mean a ' nw - <al ’ '-n- pa-sed beloi ' supply firms which recently merged
saving to do it now, bocau-e if the -stopp-d and brought them into iM .| am estown.
workmen has to cut through the eon-' (,l " , ' n,a ’ s ^" l " * M ‘ lrt ’ a ‘ ,< ‘ ‘ >,H l,> i ’’Mr. Doddridge rij* pent practiccrete, it will mean more time an-l Hutcheson. jaPy al! of his bu-1rfe- life in Vjnwork and of course, additional expeii-i 0 eei m--, coining here twi nt> years ago se to those who aie having the work I HIS WEEK’S VVEVIHKR ’ young man l(*>in (ireimca.-tle,
Hone. Generally fair except showers mid-
dle of week: temperature below normal but rising slowly Monday, reach-
Warren #. V«mt v the summer in aeho
University, yvitT^^ign ■ | s during the next mmitli an
prything wiffTw ready
another nine months imi-h.
reau I$| In Taxes
mm*® RE VI S OF V AST SI M
HEAD
Bainbridge Boy Hit By Automobile
: ti
o the former homF •■ hi- wife, ’la addition to bis cnmnrti' n with • lunibi r companies, Mr. Dodd-
ing normal
slightly above uboutl
s apitWAl'OUS, July JO —Harry LAD SERUM SI,V IN.II RED I,A M’, Fnilttri i , secietary of the Indiana Tax SV I1 RI»VV WHEN SJKt ( K Lllllall 1 UU1IU I'b 11 .' Association, ha« called at Id VI TO. 1C 1
Uead ounday
calle.l
to a letter sent from Lewis . w ..^irector of the tax ib-part- ( the Indiana Fai’m Buieau COW it to farm B'lf^ifu- th nug State. This letty. urging tie to take a lively inter, t in ers and theieby assist in the j.^, leducing goveinniental cosi , •at the *t*U- federation an I
\i()Vaye.s’ aasociatm, g and that the exp,
n of the taxpayers' orgaiiiza-
The nine year old son ,,f Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Stoner, living soutliwcst ,f llainhridge wu- seriously injured about -even o’clock Saturday evening when he ran in front of an autonnidriven by Mis.- Agn, s Cuirari, as thboy and othei cliildieu were playing e-n the side walk in Lainhih ge. The lad was visiting Ids grancl-
i idge is a charter mciiii,, r and past
I Wednesday, and slightly c<V. r almv’.'eb,ti : „,d a Thursday ! ! ' 1 ll ’ a ' ,, ’ r tl«’ ' mCemie.- Mason
^ lie lodge No. 1. He li is been a mem-
I be, of the school I),, id, his term exjpiiing August 1. While he has been In member of the s, Imol board, the I greatest iniprovemen: - in the eity’s ■chiiel hi tiny have been made. The I.standards of education have been
i , -ed and an exteh.-ive building pruMRS. MVRGVKE’I ID ILL VND DIES Y 111 " put the ugh, in ludlng the new
V I HOME (H D Vt (.11 I ER, MRS. K EN N E l H HVURIS.
INI
meetings of the organized MHi have been aniuijneed and - .-»• the time of these gatin ng
fiven to tax discussions,
f letter to the furni huicaus •lor says that “there arc in neks " te, 644 members of county nan . charged with the appropi Liber ,)!'about '$25,1100,000 for county n- I s, and 3,051 memheis of tow,,bun,:- ’isory boards charged with the the iation of about $(!8,000,000 |,Hik iship purposes, many of whom n in ike the pains to read the law win /hieji they make the appropiia- | U( U'|such laige -urns, all of which j i.anl can only come from the
-• ®f the taxpayeia,”
says in his b ' no reaMii lm
ams attend nc me councils :ui ' "U n
ar« »i: .• i • - -
The body of Mrs. Margaret Holland age 05 years, wa.- found in her bedroom Sunday morning at the home of Mr. and Mr>. Kenneth Harris, -ouih of tlm city, by a giauddnughter. Mr -,
sidewalk. H, , ailed from the sid 1 - 1 Ha iris sent the child to look for hei walk into tho street and ran directly h, ' r "’ oth " r - a " 1 shl ’ was f" un, ‘ '*ead, in front of Miss ( unan’s automohilo. Ilavi "k dead for several minutes
father, Edwaiil St, tier in liainbridge
t'th>eomman7,,Vthe fnr'ioe'.'s a "’ 1 Wa ;' V ’ ith th '
He was nikm ked down and suffeie I ‘ M ‘f 0 *<’ s^ 10 wa
a fractured thigh, four broken riband was cut and bruised about the face. He was taken to the Crawfordsville hospital by Dr. Veach who wa-
llowed the re
missing.
Doddridge was a mi pha <’hi Omega Doddridge of the In
Mr*. Holland ufferc, I ' Ml
appolexy last February and had I'v’" nrst president of tie
in ufililtg health since. She w. a lif' long ic.-ident of I’utnain county, I" ing the widow of W-'ineii ILdlaiid
liigl, -chiKil. "Ml*. Doddridge ha ul.-o been ac live in tbe Chanrlier ,,i (’ommerce and the Y. M. C. A. II was one of the oigunizer- of tin li ter and waanal,led memheishm \’o. I fol ohlaining tiie greatest imber of mem-
hei s.
"Roth Mr. and M Doddridge at t"iid, d Del’auw unii' i ity where Mr-.
tier of the Airily and Mr. a Kappa Ep-i-also was tin I ri Kappa sol
called, innI an X-Ray
suit of his injuries. He was returned " h " • s " lm ’ fifteen year- ago. to the home of his grandfathei Satin- Mis. Holland is survived by fi' 1 day night. It will ta ••• •. vcral day- children, < luules Holland, Coate-vilb for the outcome of his injuries to iie ‘homa- Holland, Clinton town-hip known icfinitely, it was thought. Mls * 0ran Mooro, and Mi Han. No blame was attached to the driv- Greencastle township; and Mrs. Jo.
nriti here. “The many friend ridge wi-h him U" mnlei taking.”
of Mr. Dodd -s in his nev
er of the car, as she had no chance to avoid striking the hoy, it was stated by tho * who witnc—ed the atcideid. (I EDISON BELIEVES HOOVER will m: nkvi presidem
ROCHESTER, N. V., July 30. —
the ho(c ly or in- Thomas V. Edison i of the opinion efiieja! . “The that llooc, r will be the next presihuge sums for dent of tho I'nited States. In Roby men ju t cho-ter a- the guest of George Ka-t-Bay thein,” man, the inventor an-werod a mini-wi.-e or ‘ M ’ r "f ((uentions sulnnitted in writing, ho make “Jn my opine n Hoover will he ■taking in elected," he wrote ii reply to a puesall times Don as to whether Smith or Hoover formation would lie sucre--fill this fall. “Smith r,' po.-s,. - • Ji too much loaded with assoeiation-
y reason- w'hich people do not like.” >rv boa'd °
di-cu-siui. <I 'V DI ME VI IRE
Inman, Albion, Michigan. Daniel lirackney and Charlex Biaikney ar hiothei- and Mrs. Rebecca Eigb*i of Clinton township is a sister. The funeral service* will be he from the Methodi-t I’rotestaiit * huieii at Clinton Falls Tuesday afternoon a* 2:,{0 o’clock, with burial in the ('Lu-
ton Fall Cemetery.
Miss Washburn Qualifies In The Olympic Games
FORMER D P VI W ( (LED V III I.KI E MINS FIRS I HONORS IN
VV|*s| ERDAM ' ONTESTS.
YOUNG MEN IN ACCIDENT THIS MORNING
Miss Mary Wn-hburn, former In*Pauw student and athlete, and now i member of the Olympic team, representing the I n ted States at the ninth annual Olymp , being held in Vinersterdnm, Holland. <|ualifie,l in the third heat of tie 100 meter dash
Rev. I!. H. Bruner, pastor of the I'ir-t Christian Church spoke at the l iiion Services at the Haptist Church Sunday evening. His message wabased upon the 21th verse of the 27th jchapter of Matthew’s go-pel, (Dr I Moffatt translation t: “Now when Pilate saw that instead of doing him any good a riot was ri-ing, he took ronn* water and washed hi- hands in ] 1 he presence of tho crowd, say ing, ’I am innocent of this good man’s blood It is your affair’.” Mr. Bruner said in part: "Jesue was a difficult problem when he was on earth. Four times in the eoursi "t the trial he was ‘handed over’ by one iTnivd or individual to another in in attempt to got rid of him. Anyiiing to get Jesus off’ their hands thi-e was the motive hack of tho.si actions which finally led Jesus to th, cross,” I hi> <»ltl tfiimc of side .'topping a ital i-sue and avoiding a delinito de •i.-ion has been given a new name in our ago. We call it ‘Passing tin buck’ Since the war this -Ling pnrasi ha come into common use. You can hear it and you can see it being practiced almost anywhero m our modern
life.
"In the case of the men who said ■ d Jesu- while he was on earth, ‘that is your affair,’ they all lied. Jesuivas the affair of every man and every group of men with whom hi rumo in contact while he wa- on ■arth. He was everybody's problem. He (hallenged every man to some kind ,,l a decision. He came back to pa-s judgment upon every man and ••very group wSn tried to get him off •heir *u.!id ’•’ - , the affair of ■very man and every group of men ’"day. But men and still playing hi- ame o| ( | game of ‘passing the nick around Je-u- and hi- Church Bu-ines- nioii say, ‘Jesus and religion a matter for the preachers to look • 'ter. VV,* do not want t,„, much religion in and indii-try Let the preacher- keep the people enri'“iit with tho hope of a fine inaii-ion n heaven, and we will see that they never get a tine mansion here.’ Politicians -ay, ‘Let the preacher- look after Jesus and the Church. It is their affair. Jesus i> not the affair of governments, but of individuals. Let 'he preacher- regulate the private moral - of people but let them keep -HI in the face of corruption in gov•rimient.’ The colleges and uuivers'tie- say, ‘Religion and Jesus is not ur affair. We are interested in teaching youth history, psychology, economics, science md the other imiioCniit subjects. Let the preachers look after the religious side of life.' With the result that thousand- of voung people are being turned out "f ,ur educational institutions every vear thinking of religion and Jesus Christ and hi values for life a- beng only petty non-e.-sential.s in comparison with the other interests in life. .So it goes down the line, Jesus is not our affair i- the old, old cry of tho.-e who would pa-s the buck and try to get him off their hands. “Je-u- is the affair of business today. Cnle-s we build iutd our modern bu-inoss and industrial life the principles of the religion of Jesus t uri-t our present civilization will g,, the way of all other great civilization- , f the earth which have igimr "d the -piritual values in life. Je-u-'s the affair of our political life. If there was ever a time when politics Heeded some of the values of Jesus Christ it i- now. Euless our whole
It is always full of water and hands. Look at ju.-t a few of our modem problems, about which people are washing their hands and suiing, ‘this
is not my affair.’
“Take > ur crime wave for example. Who is responsible? The police say the courts are responsible, the court say the police are responsible.. The home blames the school and the Church and these institutions blame the home. And those men who have faint hope of the revival of the old days when li(|U, r Mowed freely everywhere say that prohibition is to blame for all our crime. To hear these people talk one would suppose that we never had any crime before j prohibition. Crime is an affair of everybody. It touches every home in the nation sooner or later. One of the old Hebrew prophets said in tlie face of the crime wave of his day, ’.Make a chain, make a chain, for tho city i- full of crime and bloody violence.’ This is the only solution for the present crime wave. Let every agency face its re-ponsibility for the crime wave police corruption, court delays, lack of moral emphasis in education, emphasis upon the non-es-sentials of religion in the churches, tdain indifference in the homes about the moral and -piritual welfare of
C00LIDGE DEDr*"£S MONUMENT
GELIYS BERG HERD RAID TRIBl TE AT CANNON FALLS EXERClSKS ON SEN DAY, 4
Hoi’ES FOR BETTER UNION
I'residcnl In HIn Address Tells Why Heroic Deeds Live on And M hy Heroes Are Immortal. ,
(Continued on page three) VIOLENT DEATHS REACH ELEVEN OVER SUNDAY \s I SI \L \l IDMOKILKS I VKE TOLL IN STVII. OVER THE
M EEh END.
1 Ml KIIKK \I.SO REI’ORIED
Death loll In Slate Continues Keep I’aee M ith Record Set Early lu Vear.
illy United Press)
Violent deaths in Indiana over the week-end reached a total of eleven, hree by auto accidents and a slay-
ing among the causes,
James Parker, 4H, Mnoiesville, died I ongaged
CANNON FALLS, Minn., / 30 —President Coolidge, speak*, g here Sunday at the dedication of a memorial to Col. William Colvill, one of the heroes of the battle of Gettysberg, tie • Lire, that “heroism is not only in the man, but in the occasion.” Ho eharacterizeil the memorial as “.stand ing as an exhibition of pure jiatrio-ti-m, of supreme sacrifice for the integrity of the Union and the inviolate sovereignty of the Federal constitu-
tion.”
Mr. Coolidge said in part: Heroic deeds have about them an element of immortality. We stand in leverence before those who perform them a.-il cherish their memory down through the age.- because we recognize in theb the manifestation of a spiritual life, the evidence of things not seen, a presence which was without beginning and is without end, a power that lifts men above the thing.! of this earth into the realm of the di-
vine.
Except a- we chert ish a belief in
these realities, we should have no rot|uirement for heroic deeds and no reverence for those who do them. Re cause of their very nature, because a knowledge of them inspires us to higher thing-, it is altogether fitting that we should assemble on thi Lord day to leconsecrate ourselves by dedicating a meinolial to one of tho heroi e-i of the battle of Gettysburg. Re- , cause we believe in the reality of light and truth and justice, and recognize the necessity of supporting them with every neees.-ary sacrifice, induding life itself, we could not be
in any more devotional «• •
d injuries suffeie! whin struck In
ImliaiiMpoll- In an automobile driven
by a “hit and run" motorist. James Kpieee, IS, Chicago, and
twin than in rcveient'ing the memory of those who have nobly responded to that high conception of eternal duty. Heroism is not only in the man hut:
Mi-- katlieriin Downing, 19, Warsaw j in >1"’ occasion. While there is a cerverc killed when an auto wa struck 'ni" glamm which attaches itself to ly n Winona iuterurhan ear. i the peril which the highwayman mid Steve Li Like, 21, South Bend, wa-1 (be bandit incur in their criminal acIrowned while swimming in an ulian- tivities, it is not genuinely heroic. It
billed gravel pit. William Tiefel, IS, -.uperiiitendent if the Brazil Clay mine- two miles wo-t of Brazil, w’u- killed by an explosion of dynamite. He set off a ■hnrge of the explosive in a mini’ which had failed to explode the day nrevious and evidently failed to get far enough away before the lila-t. James Ma-.-ey, 20, Chicago, drown'd in Cedar Lake near Crown Point while wimming.
will not survive analysis. It leatltnowheie. Having no moral ipiality, it in ovule- no inspiration. It is only tt counterfeit of the reality. If it is re-' memliercd at all, it is not ot uibles-* ing but as a curse. * The meniori. e dedicate to day is not onL physical courage of men of high cnaraeter di playo.l in an hour of great peril, but a-to in behalf of a great cau.se. There wa* in their deed no element of selfi. h-
Klmer M'ells, 11, Gary, was fatally tie--, no hope of personal gain.
DRIV ER M ENT TO SLEEP VI I HE WHEEL COMING FROM
TERRE MAI IE.
[life as a nation i- tempered with the
Monday, ax old ing t- a cablegram re- ,.,.1^,,,, ,,(• j,.* u . Christ we are headceived by I’he Banner Irom the I nited ,,,,( townrd ruin. The preacher today I’le-s (Hi re-pond'nt in Amsterdam, j w |,„ ( |,„. s n ,,t ti y t' mix religion with
Miss Wash bun
hurt when he was run mcr liy a caterpillar crane. Edgar Badger, 19, Chicago, was drowned when a boat cap-ized in Lake Michigan a half mile off shore at Michigan City. Stanley Ross, 35, Indianapolis, died Saturday of a bullet wound inflicted Friday night at Logansport by an unidentified man. T!o,-s was employed 1 by a carnival company. He is said to have ijiiarreled with another employee and shortly afterward daggered from behind a wagon on I he carnival grounds .suffering from the
wound.
Phillip Lantz, 2, son of Mr. and Mr Willie Lantz, Miller-burg, died is a result of eating tablets containing poi-on which he mistook for
candy.
Albert Chaplin, til, Marion, is dead of injuries suffered when he was struck by a street car. o— Trade Boster Day A Grand Success
tands as an exhibition of pure patriotism, of upreme sacrifice for the integrity of the Union and the inviolatis overeignity of the Feudal constitu-
tion.
It i- tbc-c ipialitie- which Iwing th«i great concourse of our citizens to do honor tci the action of C<»1. Colvill and his regiment more than three scorn years nfur the event. Th: same honor will continue to be > them not only so long as the u* »n whii'h they served shall endure, but o long a elf-sacrificing devotion to high icb commend itself to the heart of I men. o—— — » | CARS COLLIDE , ON SUNDAY; WOMEN HURT
ELDERLY LADY, \GK 99, WAij INJI RED BY ELVIS GLASS SUNDAY MORNING.
Iju, o’clock and a c n after partmeiit got there the
the fire dcflre was not
terns, piopo.-ed fciriceuntj . ni j Pittman' pond wn tho ^ 1 p budget- and that .inly another tin Sunday night about nine
Ql'L I the general interest „f in the.-e matters will tux' -
, Jj," ! ' n Indiana. ..a t AR Tl RNS OVER. ■r
priigd‘Rjipet Sedan belonging t„ Art I .pfiiTurned over three times Sun-
Hurold Crawley, son of Ralph Crawley, and Claire Brown, son <>i Milt Brown, met with an accident
fni"
ernoon and landed
brought under control until after two early Monday inclining while return hours work. The conllagration burst ng from Terre Haute, on the Manforth early Sunday evening at the city hattau Road near the Mount Olive
dump, hut had been burning under- j Church, heath the trash all summer. Th” hose to the fire had to he laid across Jackson street and traffic was blocked for
in Amsterdam.
carrying ! the affairs of govei nment is not man-
ifesting the trait- which made tic prophets of Israel and even Jesu- i himself great in their day. Educa- I tinii needs the values of the religion
VY I ATION GAINING ! of Jesus. He is an affair of our colINDIANAPOLIS. July 80. (UP)—(leges and universities. If we con-
Aviatic n in the Vntral State- is | tinue to pour a teady stream of edurapidly gaining ii popularity among rated pagans out of our educational
the populace. Tbs was revealed in ] institutions into <*ur
a statement by afi
( ROM D V\ \S THOUGHI lo H W E
BEEN LARGEST 1N V ATTENDING THESE EVEN IS.
ILniy Marshall, who resides fiv* mile.- v c st of Greencastle, while n**« getiating the corner at Wushingt...i
(and I.eel'st street.- was struck by an j old Ford touring in which threo men
colors of the Mi lie c Athletic ( luh ; of New Y' ik in the Olympic contests. | ^
The Merchant Towle Boo-ter ccin-jD"ni illoon ington were driving about test for July, which closed Sidurdity, i ''• l"< k Sunday morning, brought out what was thought to M'n Rachel Alspnugh, age 90, wa* have been the largest crowd that ha* 'll the cal with Marshall, and was attended any of these events, since I cut and bruised severely and had to
life for a few'the plan was started a few month- Im> taken to a doctor for treatment,
airplane sales more years we will liecome th.* most iago. I hey were going to Galvin King ^
The driver if the car fell a-l'ip agency located in Indianapolis today pagan nation on the face of the earth. The awards went to the following ‘"'•u*’ northeast of Greencastle when iiid it went into a ditch and through Since July I, according to Boh j Jesu* is the affair of every phase of ! persons: !thc accident occurred. Their car was
. barb wire feme. Brown wa- cut Shank, president if Hoaaier Airport, our modern life, and if we continue *50, Mis. Ernest Stoner, severely all over his body, but hi- this company has sold eighteen bi-'to pass the buck concerning him and *25, Miss Ernestine Masten. fac,' uiis cut the worst. He lost ix plane-. The company is the di.strib-' the searching demands of his teaching >10, Pius Lanham, Mrs. Mike
tuth a result of the accident and utor for an airplme manufacturing upon every department of life, we Wolfe, William Binkley, Mrs. Ro.-s THE WEATHER stitches had to be taken concern for several states. cannot escape hi- judgment. 7< rr and Mrs. Grant Scott. Mostly fair tonight and Tuesday
near Little and driven icy Robert Rocket quali on M ieg md Mn . Crawle* “Soineone baa well MiaMtid that •- Mr* Wur—n Yubrey, Drew but sbowera tonight er INwediy in •vner bridge when his car struck tied, hut failed to run far in the race not hurt t riously and .scaped with Mi. J. H. Pit. hfonl i spending Pilate's wash bowl is the most popular Hi i- Mrs. C. T. Zaring, Mi— Myrtle |.southwest |iortion. Blight I' ' ' <* ruck he:«le«I for Terre Haute. Jon account "f the motor freezing up. [only minor scratches. tho week ai Martinsville. ^wash bowl the world has ever sen. ^-y, Mrs. William Pablos. ^Tuesday. ^ . £§ l#U
its some time.
.-'luck in the middle, breaking wills lows und denting the side of the car.
’fscfwith no one hurt and the car o . rhtly damaged. Knoy was not The racer entered in the race at the car at the time of the Brazil yesterday liy Stark and Griffith numerous
'A 1, jk|which occurred
