The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 August 1928 — Page 4
It
Pag’e Four
Advance Fall Showing
THE GREENCASTLE DAILY BANKl'R, TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1928.
Kidney Trouble Is Relieved By Brief
Costume Accessories
merit made by K h". Beeson of Pur- ^ - due University, chairman of the soy- ♦ bean committee directing those meetings. Special preparations have been made by the farmers co operating in these regional meetings and a highly interesting program of dem onstrations and discussions will
of Import
Decidedly Different Neckwear Conceits
New Leather Bag Styles
Clever new vestees chic litllr collar and cufT sets trills of lace—silks — organdies, etc. The prices Iwgin at .'Oc. Hrichten up that old dress!
These new leather handbags and purses are just the needed object to add that note of smartness. Variety in style and color. Prices start at ?>2.!i0.
.11 ST
SHI PM ENT’ m«)(h iii:s
Akimvi;d! a (;i<i;\t JEWELRY BEADS
IMPORT El) FKEMt II MESH
BAGS.
OF NOVELTY AMD
S. C. PREVO COMPANY
There is
be I
conducted. It is hoped by County Agent Stevenson that a large l< .d delegation will plan to attend thc.-e meetings as they will be of peciai value to all that are intere !ed in
soybeans.
The meeting will -tart at 10 o'clock the morning of the lath, at the farm of J. B. Hdinoiisiin, near Clayton who has 14 varieties growing on upland soil. Both .Mr. Edmonson and hi.brother, Ralph, will lead a discussion on the talk by Mr. Beeson which will follow inspection and demonstrations of fertilizer plots, varieties, and hay ^ ^ i .-v-s.. 1 - ■ ... . I.. 4 i •. I i n c *110 yi fT I t P
1 making demonstrations
the best rate of
Charles Cline, a former Groenea--tie boy who w.i arrested on SaUi! day by Mar.-hal Dave Br.olen, on i iliarge of forgery wa not brought up before Judge Hughes on Tuesday as uas exported. Hi- ca-e will probably come up Wedne ilay. Anothe check, beside- those which bad already i» • n procured In the pro.-ecutor ha been found. Th< check wa foe J 10.50 which lie gave at I’revo-’ (ori .
! iana op n chanipion, have been selec- [ ted to play \ re he Conipson, Great Britain’s -tai golfer, and Audrey Boomer, champion of France, in an exhibition match here next Saturday. The match ) to be played on the link- of the W'awasee Golf and C'oun try Club.
ALL OVER INDI AN \ VVAWAM.I (, I . on, Fort Wayne, 101IS open ehampion and Bert Meyeiing, South Hend, fornn r In
SOYBEAN MEETING Farmers and soybean growers will be oai tirularl. interested in the detailed program < f thi' regional soyh<'in meeting to be held on Wednesday, Aug. 15 in Hendricks and Morgan c ounty according to an announce-
another showing
seeding.
The Hazelwood Home Economics Club will serve lunch at the farm or picnic lunches may be eaten in the grove at this farm. The noon program will draw other headliners in the business of growing soybeans Among the speakers wall be ( ecil McCollum, Mcoresvilie; 0. W. Hynes. University of Tennessee; C. J. W’il lard, Ohio State University; Adrian Parsons, Plainfield; and A. T. Edmonson, another of the family of soybean growers. Following a tour of farms in the Association, C. J. Ru-hton’s farm will be the last stop of the day, where the tourists will study the effects of different method < f cultivation. The party will leave from the Rushton farm at .T:30 for the trip to Purdue University at Lafayette. The stops in Hendricks and Morgan counties are in one of the best soybean growing areas in the state, and a tour through the farming section ami nh-erving of the bean growing and method- of handling them along would be worthwhile. The demonstrations and discussions will make it several times as valuable.
4 SECRETAR Y WEST IS SWORN IN
U ANT'S MODEST' FUNERAL LONDON’, Aug. 7. (UP)— Lady ! \stor ha- told In i husband she does ! not want him to spend a lot of money on her burial. “Anything Lord Astor has to spend he must spend while I am living, not when I am dead,” she told a Plymouth audience recently. She added she would consider it a positive disgrace to have a fine funeral.
of them, v ere preventable,
no use taking a chance when diving, fi.-hiin or .swimming. These pleasur- j
es ace not worth the hazzards.
p is better to be timid and alive in | a beat than to b. brave and drowned | a. a canoe. It is better to be call- 1 d an old woman and stick close to
Use of VerWilKo
the shore than it is to have a pulmo•„r applied in an effort to bring you lack from a shore on the other side if eternity, tl is better to build up u reputation as a careful driver than ! to pose as a fellow who burns up the highways. Don’t he afraid to insist on using good judgment at all times.
A’ou may live long'!.
The loss of life is the tragedy of the tourist season. Such a tragic perirrt is now here Only the most extreme care will prevent serious acc.d< nts. Be careful this summer.
Would Girdle Globe
YOl THEl I. M AIL T 11 IFF 1 MASON, Mich., Aug. 7. (UP)—A 12 year old hoy was revealed here I as a mail robber, thereby solving a mystery that had been perplexing lo- , cal officers for weeks. The boy was laire.-ted by Deputy Sheriff Reinhart | when he began to rifle a lock box in j the Mason post office. For several | weeks, the county clerk, a judge, three banks, and several others had been missing mail.
IT P —Tinder Here are two Spanish aviatori who are eager to claim their share of aerial glory by making flights around the world. Above is Capt. Julio Ruis de Alda of the Spanish Army. Below is Commander Ramon Franco, who flew from Spain to South America in 1926.
1 Sectrotary of the Interior, Roy O. Wot, being sworn in at Washington, D. by W. B. Acker, chief clerk of the department of the •Interior. West is in centi r, Aek. r at left and at right is Dr. Hubert (Work, whom Want sueceed- in thi cabinet.
I ROM II UTINESS TO SORROW A tremendous effort to induce ac- . idi nts in industry is being made. In-mi.-try di vend that aeeidents were not only regrettable, but costly, so theii elimination began a number of years ago. Today an accident in inciu>try i- a rarity. For years the railroad- of the nation have been eondii'.ing “Cross Crossings Cautiously” campaigns and the loss of life in this manner has been noticeably reduced. As great an effort is needed to rec uee the hazards of happiness. Ifick up an> Monday morning paper during this season of the year and the 1 fri lit page i- crowded with the story |'f tragic death- by automobile aocileint- and drownings. At one time | during the fore part of July it seemed a - if an epidemic of drownings had j broken out in the state. S’ me of these deaths, in faet most
His Diets Are Forgotten Since Taking Konjola
i'/ften Tunney Abdicated Throne
* : 'N V
fakgv.- ^ ______ Four notables of the ring photographed after Gene Tunney had announced^'his^retircment from the heavyweight championship. Left to right, Billy Gibson, his manager: f . Wi.liam JWuidoon, New York Stats Boxing Commissioner: Tunney, and Tex Rickard. ^aa/a elpinxuon tournamey ty asbwt s .uoesatoc to Owm>.
Suffered I ntol.i Agony Alter Bating,” He Stales.
MR. H. C. GENTRY.
“When i -Urted with Konjola, my stomach was in a terrible shape and I had been living on a special diet for several months," writes Mr. H. <’ Gentry, 7l4 East New York St., Indianapolis, Ind., “hut it soon made a new man oil of me anti 1 am gla 1
to leeommenj it to others.
‘T .suffered untold agony after eating as my fug! did not digest and a hard inek wmld seem to form in the pit ot my stimach. After doctoring • or a K ng tine without results, I began locking around for something el-e to gi\e i„ P relief. Konjola was -uggi -ted to me and I started taking i’- it gradually began to relieve me idbiough it worked very slowly. I reali/.ei niy condition was of long '’-anding am decided to give this medicine a air trial. Now I have takr/i severs bottles and can eat almost everytiing without any suffering afterwail. The diets, which I formerly usd, are a thing of tlv 1 as L I’ll ne.er forget what Konjola
did for ine.”
Konjola i-sold in Greencastle, Ind.
MR. R. C. BROWN
suffered continually with neuritis, and now I am a great believer in your wonderful remedy, VerWilKo,” said Mr. R. C. Brown, a well-known mechanic of Bedford, Indiana, after many of his friends had advised him to try the new vegetable liquid com-
pound. “I I...
had also suffered from kidney trouble for a long time, and
I find that this too is greatly lelieved and the pains all gone aft-
er taking VerWilKo.
“Gas pains which 1 had disappeared and the gas was all expelled from my stomach, and I am thankful to say that my worrisome loss of appetite gave me no more concern. I now eat almost anything which a man of my age should, and I gladly testify to the wonderful benefits of
VerWilKo.”
Granada
Hfdfaiu
»iC;
nTBiilSE
WINDY CITY DETECTIVES TO TOE MARK
(Continued Iroin page one)
LitY’U
Tonight Last Times Nancy C arroll in “CHICKEN Al
penitentiary.”
With perfect sangfroid and fluent grammar, the detective chief discussed his edict. His was an humble rearing under the guidance of a mother who slaved at the washtub. She had been widowed early in life and
AIR MEET IN (OLOKA1HI COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
1 Stiffs tre eij'ti 111
»eei t<i tike
sit m«.\, '\iejiT\v':
Aug. 7. (UP)-Aces of the Rocky
fered contesUnt
Mountain region and many pilots r " , '~ ’ *■
from oth'-r sections of the United
event. onthe^^B
under this handicap trained her clfileireii while doing neighbors’ washing. Commissioner Siege’s schooling wan negligible through rPlf-education and uji'd study he gained the knowledge that made him a loader of men ami won him recognition on the police
department.
nt i
/r _ Two Champions of tit* J
(ai the Owl pug store and by all the ! '" -I druggi-j in all towns tnrough-I
When able to earn money to aid his mother he went to work in the stockyards. At the age of 21 he joined the police force. Fate played a winning hand for the policeman. His hist job brought him in contact with University of Chicago professors. His desire for learning created a friendship that grew with the years. Many nights he walked his post in company with a professor, questioning and conversing.
Later he had ae: ess to libraries on the campus and through these contacts and haul study he passed a law examination and was admitted to the bar. He never became a practicing attorney, however.
^ Johnny Farrell (left), national open title W^J Eapinoza after the latter * victory in the Wester f, | at Chicago, s
Jarry Stars and Stripes to Victory
\ ; 5 :: v
■ ■ «*■ *3
»this ptjtrrj ^fctior:
of ite Jniogo iVomen's Athl.tic Club. Hamm set a world _ *j< 0 <*'. 25 feet 4 i-e incfiea to win his eveit in the Olympiad. Miss ” t f.J *' * world-mark by running the finalf of the women * 100 me*re Ha.
