The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 August 1928 — Page 1
mt Wt ^ Chair;
Storm*.
^bUUME
THE DAHy BANNER
» ALL THE HOME NEWS • ♦ WNITED PRESS SERVICE • *♦++++++++++++♦*
THIRTY-SIX
CiREENCASTLE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1928.
No. 255.
AR skids in 30SE GRAVEL;
w WOMEN HURT
B Cl. i^i
IV
BAINBKIOGE GIRL MENTIONED. TAKES
TO DITCH TO AVOID TRUCK
E, , VitK
William H. Ilemy, proseiutiii^ attorney of Marion county is in\p.sti|tatinjr a re|)ort made to him by Miss Juanita Libka, a Re 22, living on Hainbiidire Rural Route 1, she stated, concerning an alleged vice ring of !n-
JENN1K BAfedW SEKIOt S-1 dianapolis. The girl said she ans1. HlRT m jH^fDL' N T ON we red an advertisement in Indianapoap 4J, Its as a bookkeeper, that a man a
few days later came to her home and
_ i.i.,k h'i- to Indianaptdi . when aha (DENTS WAYS E IOM N ( wor k ( ,d f or a few da>>. Then she
said he demanded $200 which she jtro-
Ttarea Da SWe North Of (ityjeured from her parents. He took her Noon. Had Como for a drive over the city and after ■aav To Viait. (eating at a hotel, knew nothing for
two weeks. When she woke up in
EMORY E. COOPER IN Al t IDENT ON STATE ROAD td
LAST NIGHT.
1>RI\ EK
ESI APES
ft thi »i i<
route back to their home in letown from thin city, two wo-
| a Louisville resort, she escaped and
I telephoned to an uncle.
tooper Attempted To Pass Machine And Takes To Ditch To Avoid
t rash Mith Truck.
BRENNE.N S El NERAL
TOMORROW.
CHICAGO, Aun. !•. (UP)—George E. Brennan, national Democratic leader, will be buried in much the same manner as he lived, simply and
without display.
Funeral services for the veteran politician who succumbed yesterday to septic poisoning will be held tomorrow, and will follow plans made
by him before he died.
Private services will be held at the
UNHl RT home, and will be followed by church
services at Our LjuI\ of Mount CurImel Catholic Church, Brennan’s home
parish.
SWASHBUCKLER DAYS IN OLD CLINTON TWP.
I ESN ESS EK AND KENTl ( Kt BLOOD BOILED Ot EB \ I TIMES IN CIVIL M AR.
ithe Golden Circle were well organiz-! ed and operated during the period of the great hostility. Men and boys became bitter enemies of those Who had
been their closest friends.
The sympathizers of the South directed their enmity against the Union soldiers who came home on furloughs, especially. Wm. Davis' father was slated for hanging by them, even the I tree on which he was to swing bo-J | ing determined, but the plan failed. ■ One other man was to he captured 1
RESIDENTS OF CITY SWELTER IN HEAT WAVE
WEDNESDAY MAS HOTTEST DA t OF SI MMER. MERC l RY REACHED 95. ^
we injured, one seriously about 1 today when the Oldsmohile coupe h*. ich they were riding, skidded in ii gravel on State Road 4;i, north C s city, and turned on its side.
WORD FROM DOM BOY
Mis. A. J. Dou has received two
taking to the ditch to avoid hit- postal cards from her son, Julius, iting an approaching log tiuck, Em-j who disappeared fiom his home east
ROPES AND BULLETS FIGURED and hung as he approached his home,. >W IMMERS SEEK STREAMS ______ (from the Union army, but a woman j
who heard of the plot warned him of the danger before he reached the am- ! hush, and he took another trail home,
avoiding the conflict.
. In the house of the [dace now oe-
Jerciniah’a rhetorical question tojeupiod by I’lank McAlinden, several the effect that the leopard cannot miles from Bonneville's site, in the
Bonneville, Alias Alma, On Wolf Pen Fork of Little Walnut, Now
In Paradise.
LEASES (ONFKUTIONKRY
THtb
was driving and her companion,
II. H. Tower has leased the J. K. Cash confectionery store at the cornier of Walnut street and Spring Ave-
icnn
Jennie Harlow, were unahleH Ml. any details of the accident, ex]
iPk that they were nearing a cull
at the time that they met an- ! car, which did not give Mrs. |
V1 r room to turn the car back in-
■ road when it started to swerve jasserby brought the women in | ir into the city where they were i OldliV to °^ ce L> r - W. M Me ley where their injuries were ; *»d. The older woman, M iw, suffered Urge gashes on her forehead mad scalp, and a dou ! acture of the left arm. .Mi waa not seriously Injun,I, a
ily suatained bruises.
not thought that tin cai ly wrecked,, except that tla Shield had been broken in tie Mr*. Foster has a *l*ti r. Mi - ^a* Huffman, adta lives on V rti >n St., and they had come here the day with her, but tmd not at home, had start, ,1 to
rir home wh*n the a m-
[ nue and will open for business on I September 1. Tower is a student in I DePauw University. Mrs. Emma O'- , Hair and Kermit Tower will a.-sist in the confectionery. The firm will he conducted along the same policies as established by Mr. Cw.-h the |>a>t
few years.
— o
Bright Sun Thursday Morning Gave Indications That Temperature Mould Be High Today. .1 Wednesday was the hottest day as
. .. . vet this summer for Greencastle ar-
I oi > h. Cooper, damaged his light of the city Monday. The first card change its spots ha> never been at- oast door frame, there i- ;< bullet ' Hilling to the government gauge at i coupe but fortunately escaped in was post marked t rawford.-ville, and ! ai'ke,| hy the super-critic, but Carth- hole made h> a Union mao who now t *"‘ home of Prof. Ernest R. Smith , jui> near the Big hour arch on one which she received Thursday age, being another sort of cat, chang- has relations in Greoncastle. A 1,1 NorthwooH. The thsraiometer State Road 43, just north of the city morning was msile i from Chicago, spots and became Mt. Mend Southern sympathizer had been where registered a maximum of DO degrees on Wedne-duy evening about H p.m. and told nothing except that he was ' Hn - Now comes Rooneville, on the'the bullet hit, just a scant second or | ihove which is the highest it has According to Cooper, he was driv- all cipht. Wolf Pen fork of Little Walnut, in less before. -oared t,slate. I ing at a model ate rate of speed and The boy disappear'd from hi home. ’ hnton township, which vm,x known in ! It is needles to say that the fam- 1 * itixens of the city sweltered again started to pass aiuund another car. (either last Sunday evening or late on "fl^cial and society circles under the ilies of all these old-time enemies are I hursday morning as the hot rays of Because of the dust and the blind- Monday, driving tin family car. (aesthetic designation, Alma. the best of friomls now. —G. K Black heat down upon the sidewalks ing headlights he could not see -o Uncle Sam know it, or her, as that. ! — ° i ;,n d pavements. Before noon there
Mail addressed to Alma reached the ! ^ ^, » ■ r» k r T' 'va-overv indication that the mercury ntiziiis of Booneville. The im t tense (Irrll IAIN A I hi * h if not higher than
* IV-Iial-iU ia I ^,,1, Wednesday during the present
heat wave.
DEATH CALLS J. A. BROWNING ON WEDNESDAY
WELL KNOWN M \N PASSES AM U AT HOME OK BROTH-
ER HERE.
plainly and just as he started to go around the other machine he saw a log truck approaching. To avoid hit ting the truck he werved back with a sudden application of the brake-. The car was thrown sideways and
went into the ditch.
The auto landed on its left side, damaging the top, smashing both of the fenders, and bending one of the ' disk wheels. The Franklin Street garage wrecker wa- called and tow1 ed the machine into the city for re-
, pairs.
PI FILS’ RELil \ I,
TO CONDUCT CATTLE TEST OVER COUNTY
STATE t KTER1N ARI AN TO SPEt T PUTNAM < OM S I OK
Tl HERO LOSES.
IJH ME OI IK E
EUNEKAL
BE FRIDAY
Deceased Had Been Resident
( omnium tv His Entire Life-Time.
Several Relatives Survive.
Y HOLDS AL PICNIC
YERAL LOCAL PEOPLE All ^ END. GOOD SPEAKERS ON
ler THE PROGRAM.
fifty ueventh annual Quin, v ic was held today with the usual » crowd turning but for the octo: Many Greencastle people m,,indft to 1 Quincy during the morning if their basket dinners with
Miss Edna Hillis will present a reading recital Friday, Aug. 10 in the high school auditorium at K:00 p. m., given by her pupils. The public is cordially invited. There will be no admission charge. The following pro-
gram will lie given:
Smile Walter Ben Hare
Margie Lee Reeves
at the Sonny Meets The Smith
Milk To Be Shipped To Indianapolis Must Be From Accredited Areas.
( ounly Not Accredited.
The past tense i'
,>f the verbs is used here for the I I reason that Alma i dead. It, or | I'he, died soon after the Civil war 1 l°sed. One local delver into histor- I ical matters in Putnam countv ha- 1 aid that the opening of the distill , ry at Clinton Falls, a quarter of a ■ mile down stream, was the cause of the death of Alma, hut Win. Davis, I who yet lives on the site of the old hamlet, -ays there was no connecHKKE lion between the two occurrence jlhat they were merely coincidental. The reason for the Dr. Jekyl-and-Mr. Hyde existence of the town, afar as concerned its names, was un- | known to Mr. Davis, hut it i- safe to as-uine that Uncle Sam, having
K. Gill, county one Booneville in Indiana, m Warfrom the rick county, did not want another in
WORK ON NEXT YEAR’S BUDGET
The heat wave has made Big Walnut Creek and other streams in the vicinity, the mecca for swimmers this week. One local motorist reports
——— i passing the swimming hole at Crowe’s IMPOSSIBLE It) COMPLETE III D- northeast of the city, last GEI l NIIL NEW \ \l.l \IK)N ; n *ffht about !• o’clock where a score
IS ASt I RI AINLD.
and
"f bathers were enjoying the cool waters of Big Walnut. Other holes \ m different directions from Green-
will I and 1
ca tie are having their share of the bathers and it is sincerely hoped
that no accidents will occur.
Mulf Pen creek
John A. Btownng, 64, died
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown
mg, 1015 south Indiana atraot, at 7 J >ch GHU pit
1 o’clock Wednesday evening. He had ^ Cullud Lady At I he Phone .... been in ill health for practically the Walter Ben Hare
entire summer but lu ,t« ath waa un- Mary Riley expected. Just Try That One More Time .. Mr. Browning was unmarried and Ldwardine ( ren-haw Couch .had lived all his life in this section Anna Ruth N’eier
" I of the state, havng been born near Expression School Romance f j'ie fifty-seventh annual Quincv here. Among the near relatives h* Mailer Ben Hare «... * -a— -.nu 1 | ( . H ve three brothers and two -isters _ ^ * i«thy Arnold
Robrt Browning, with whom he was K*port ( ard Elizabeth Hart
residing at the time of his death; T. I Lat onda Cox L. Rrowntog, who lives heat Green-1 Keep- A Becret
castle; Edwin Browning, of Alberto,
Wf' j Canada; Mrs. T. II. Snapp, of Huis an old tradition that rain al mansville, Mo., and Mi- Marion fall* some time during the day Huffman, of Pasadena, Calif. .e Quincy picnic. In GYeencaslle The funeral will be held Friday vicinity the sun was Intensely afternoon at 2 30 o’clock from the ^ind rain began falling shortly lie- Ml. Plea-ant Church. Interment inoon. It continued to sprinkle to he in the Mt. Pleasant cemetery,
shortly after 12 o’clock when
A few days ago M
auditor, received a letter
office of the -talt veterinarian, E. I Putnam county. W. Brown, which a.-ked that the Booneville on
county commissioner make an up- ma cks of the old swashbuckler days propriation of nol le than $4,000, to „ lndiHm an|| ( , >mmullil m be available by January 1, 192'J fo. somo ..p, of it . ( . x i
lived Up to its name. Its people were
Phis is necessary because two ad-l l . h i,. flv Kentuckians and Tennessee
joining counties huv< been tested and
are recognised as tin t edited
Walter Ben Hare ! cows for bo me tuben ulo i.-.
Aecording to reports here there in the community, there lie change m the city ax levie-
n he iitv schiinl loves for the coming i
——
year. Until tin exact amount of he I
valuuiou in t,teencastli> cit> and • > 'll DEBXKER FUNFRAL (iieeneustle township i.- known, it EOUTII BEND, Ind., Aug 9-(UP) will he impo ihle for the eity of Funeral -eivlee were held today fieials and the city school official- fur Mrs. Element Htudebaker, US.
I'll' 1
run came out again hotter than The rain falling aa it did still •Ids the Quincy picnic tradition, leakers at the picnic were: Harry "i*, Republican candidate for govrj Frank C. Dailey, Democrat Inee, and Albert 8tum|i, candidate S. Senator on the Demociatu
it. .
In
fit 1 .an
TOMLINSON IN TALK TO KIWANIANS
.^any citizens were contra ting to-!
' > mode of travel to Quincy as (-PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE” SI B.lFt I
f'Jpand with th«' ways of conve> INIEKEslINi, LI N» Honly a few years ago. Former- 'I'URESS. A' the Monon “plugs” took large
i^^ber* to Quincy and wagon- and DR. M Rl(,II I |s (,M.s l
ties were in vogue. Today, how- ;
the Monon railroad ha taken accommodation train- and pen-
Walter Ben Hare
Marian Sellers
! Elmer Brown James Whitcomb Riley
Juel Maddox
The Invalid Receives A Call Kdwardine Crenshaw Couch
Genevieve Vaughn
What I Call Living . Edgar A. Guest Emily Caroline Conklin Tomboy M’alter Ben Hare
Marion MeBride
Mistaken Politeness Maxine Chapman
Evelyn Crump
Pwo Tollar!.. T. S. Den.-ion (Publ.)
Kucille Conklin
At The Soria Fountain Walter Ben Hare
Meredith Reeve
Vlmost Beyond Endurann
They stood as they !•
ans, with their inherited ideas of per-
_ , , areas. i sona i liberty ami their traditional
I he law states th^t when two ad-| tru | t , >f ( , hMr „ , , r joining counties have been te ted it | for th ,. ir |irinrj| ,|,. s
is necessary for all other countie- (bom
bordering these two to he tested al 1 Th ; y f „ URht wo | vp , Hm , bears in so. Morgan and Hendi.ck- c untie. lh) , PHr|y (|avs whpn wi |d„rne. have been tested and are accredited ; n j M , otl town , hip Wlts S( ., ir( . p | y M 2! touched by the pioneer ave, when it
the main reason why this i so important to Putnam county dairy men is heeau.-e the Indianapoli- Board of Health, by the order of an ordi-
nance recently pa sed, i- going
was necessary for a man to blaze his iiail as he went in order to tie sure ot getting back from where he was going. An age of glamour to u-,
,, ,,, , possibly, but one of hardship to the require all milk brought into that |>iollPP1 . s wh „ | jvP() thrnU(fh it . e.ty to he from testeil cow in ac-, Thp Wolf p Pn f „ rk „ f W;t| . credited areas. The greatest part of „„ wh ich Booneville
the local supply ot milk is sent to In-I,.^ V ed that dianapolis and the loss of this mar-|(j on |, P( . )1U
ket would mean a great deal to the
local farmers.
to make an accurate budget.
W. E. Gill, county auditor, is now marking up all the valuations in the 1 county tlic five per cent added Tuesday at the request ' f the Indiana < State Tax Board, and until hi- is | totalled, the assessment for these i
units cannot be totalled.
The City officials aie now wiorking on the hudgx is for the coming . year, and it i believed there will be a reduction in the city tax rate. The expense will he held to the mini , mum and if the valuation i- near the! -ame a this year, there will in all piobability In* a fail reducton. In making up the city hcbool bud-| gel lor next year, there will he some! increases because of the construe timi of the Second Ward building, I and the expense- attached to the con truction that may not have been covered hy the hond issue. ' This will probably mean an equally high rate as this year if not higher. In the county, then will no doubt i In an mcrea-e in the tax levy In I rau.-c of (he heavy reduction in val-
for sixty year- n a member of one
families.
resident here and of the city’s oldest
FLORIDA STORM SWINGS TO GULF
I KOPIt STORM IS BELIEVED s| BSIBING 'HJTHEKN ST ML H»DaY.
• from around Greencastle and ‘•where made the trip by auto. I.o^■'I people returning during the af ( noon ateteii that tlMVe ■ , few **®®s and buggies at Quinn hut —the scores of perked niarhiin -Id* It * far different seine fi m
P , f * "fcon mrs afo. ev. Porter And
Family Ir Wreck
the state gnvemment make up twothirds of the |n sustained and the owner stands I for the other
third.
The state veterinarian, K. M, Brown, will have barge of the K -t
James Whitcomb Rtleyjing and will have headquarters in Catherine Wil-on j Greencastle, working out of here .n-
A Happy Tomboy to all parts of c county until the
Mary Werner Froelich I work is completed.
Eliubnth Yount —
was situat
Wild West appella
of the existence on it ■
I hanks, not far from the little village,
. .. , °f wolf traps in which the big timAccording to the county agent, tin t)Pr wo , VPS of the ,,. Kion wh „ | (1VP(| loss of any cow K und to be affected thp pior pjp< and ,. h|vps with this disease would not be great a . s thp piollPrr . ,h Pms( .|ves. ,ame to; ,
a.- the cow IS appraised hy the man L r j pf Thal jtsp | f ,| pnolps thp h*l">ut »3,(KKl,noO, and this l„- will who tests it, and when sold on th* | wi | dneH(1 of t ,„. mitura , >U rr, undmg ! hav " 10 ff : set **•' int ' re * , ‘* , market the Federal government aiu. „(• j| |e |,| a( . p | the rate to raise the same amount ‘ ‘ ’ ‘ that wa raised hi year.
The officials are working on their | ( | lp ht , 1 ( p budgets and until these are completed, they will he unable to give
JACK SON VII LE, Fla., Aug. !). — Lhe tropical hurricane which for morti than 24 hour- ha- spread destruction aero.-- the Florida peninsula was rapidly hurling its full force into the Gulf of Mexico north of Tampa to-
•day. It was hoped the wor-t of the’
tropical disturbance wa over. The high winds— which at times .in 1 reported to have reached a velocity of HO miles an hour have whiplied over a wide district starting on
i ,c , the eastern coast, sma-hing their
sK : »
west coast and * ,-xihly
In Absence „f Rev. C. Howard Tayl- Lutk •
Harry Greenwood Grover:
Martha Ellen Rector
or, \ ice-President Russell Brown
Presides At Meeting.
Prof. R. C. Tomlinson, who recently resigned as head of the public speaking department of the Grcen-ca-tle high school, to go to Lake Forest College, wa- the speaker at the weekly luncheon of the Kiwanis Club on Thursday noon in the Presbyterian Church. Prof. Tomlinson’s subject was “The Philosophy of Life.” He recited several poems to bring out hi- philosophy on humanity. Each
\ Good-bye Ki-s . W illi S'. Hugbee Margie I,ee Reeves
k coupe owned by Rev. J. k. Por- , of Terre Haute, Bbn, , r pa.-t i wi- the Greencastle Meftofl. chureh,
*1 l damage*I by (ire
Gene Tunney To Marry Rich Girl
(Copyright 1928 by United Press) NEW YORK, Aug. !). Gene Tunney, now retireil from boxing, and Mary Josephine Lauder, daughter of one of the country’s tir-t and richest
(individual, in the speaker’s opinion should have some sense of the artistic and a sense of humor to make hi-
philosophv of life complete.
Dr. Ernest Wright, a former;. . .. . ,-i. ,•
. t ..._r- l .,.v mot • i i ice tie boy, Who i- now One of h, *vy weight ohampion and the (,reen- . when the machinf wet into the the leading physicians at Belvtdere, ( W !^’ K‘ r * ™ ^"hrmh south of here were 1 m * n„ I'' 1 ,,,st niffht in an announcement by
te to this city to visi’ m,
H. R Krehl. ling Putnam county and he stated that, , ,. . . , er, at Mrs. Lauder’s request. <^Ir*. Porter sustained bruises and hp w “ s 1,1 he Greencastle .l .
.^mall daughter al-o r.*ceive,| , ut aKi ' in iM ' 1 t ‘’ hi ' ol<l fripri,l> ' .fl bruise*. Besides damage by In ‘h*’ .absence of Dr. C. Howard An oes, caused by a leak in the g;,’ Ta > l,,r ' P r '’> i 'lent of the «luh, Rus- ^ . windows in th< ma. hin. were sel1 K ' Hrown ,h ’' ''^-P^ -id»*nt, prettered and the right sid.. dented si,lH at Thursday’s meeting.
Smith To Attend Brennan Funeral
NEW YORK GO) RRNOK U> < HI ( AGO FOR LABT RITES FOR MU EM).
ALBANY. N. Y., Aug. 'J-(UP)— Gov. Alfred E. Smith will attend the funeral of Geoigh E. Brennan in Chicago, it was (heided today.
The first settler- had to travel | -ome seven miles to have their gri-t ground, to Portland Mills or Blakes j burg. There were no roads. Corn I and gri-t wa carried on horseback. Grist mill' wc re built do er, later. There wa- an Indian and bison trail up the* tream, which passeil within rifle -hot of the center of the collection of houses. Indian encamp-
ment- were not far away.
■lame Houck, an uncle of some of ! the Houcks of Washington county, came to Booneville in 1838, from l.an-ca-ter, Pa., am opened a blacksmith -hop which had a widespread business. He, ,-o Mr. Davi.-, Ins grand -on, relate-, made the iron fittings for the present old wooden bridge ov er Ramp creek at Fincastle, on -fate road 43. Mr. Davis’ mother, when -he whs so small she had to stancl on
ae< unite idea of what the levies ,| 1( , ,,,(,, r j„ r
an
I for next year will have to be. All
the lev ic - will Ice made cither tin month or early in September.
touching the
' will pass on out to sen,
Iampu and St. Petersburg on the t coa.-t were isolated. Behind the t rm la\ a trail of deva tation across
Property and crop dam-
ige vv.c c timatc'd in the millions, lb port fiom towns artel cities in
Heavy Less Ot Life By Volcano
ERITTIDN ON SOI III SEA IS LAND KILLS l.fttm. ABOUT 600 INJURED.
ami on the east coast
where the full force of the hurricane had passeil continued to indicate no
los- of life.
Wind velocities of tilt to 80 miles in hour were reported near Tampa • early today before the hurricane ; -wept down all wire- to the north. In Tampa ba> lay cua.-twise vc. -eU which had delayed departures until hurricane danger passed. Some fear '■xi ted for safety of shipping Weather bureau advices said the torm would move north of Tampa, 1 however. At 8 a. m. today all wires
The governor and members of his
| were reported down 50 miles north AMSTERDAM, Aug. 9-(UP) tof Tampa.
One thousand poisons were killed | | n thi- territory, bounded on the
a box to reach the anvil, made horse- ' lin, l *>110 injured when six villages 1 ,c uth by Tampa bay and on the shoe nail- for her father. Th>* w,,re destroyed hy an eruption of the north hy upper Citrus County, the Houcks brought with them the 1 first i vulcanic mountain Rokatinda on the 1 conter of the hurricane was believed
iron cook.-tove known in Cinton town-! i*b'ml of I'Hlqcwch, according to, moving.
I dispute he.-
party will leave ‘cere on the Twen- Booneville had a sash-Haw mill built I Batavia.
received here today from. A delayed telegram
(received here at 9 a. ll
from Tampa and appar-
families, will tie married this autumn tieth Century Un ited today at 5.4.i ) )y Colvin Grubb, a brother of George ('a.-ualti* - and piopeity de trui >*ntl\ filed hy the United Pre-.x cor-
jor winter, firobably in New York. The rumored engagement of the
and | tt brief account of hi- life aince le.v-! Jr^T mo i Ihe r , of M M r iss Laud-
H. F. (DRW IN IMPROVING Word ha lK*en mteived from Mrs. B. F. Corwin, saying Mr. Corwin who
ith-
; if;’ ,te ' i: '
THE WEATHER
With that announcement, it is pos-| is in a liospital at I uddingtoii, Mich., sible to tell why Gene Tunney be- was improving nicely and the physicame a champion and a millionaire, cian states that he Will he completeami how he became a Shakespearian | ly recovered from his illness within
scholar and a man of culture, receiv- a reasonably short time, eq into the ,-alons and drawing rooms a
of the elite.
The romance goes back five or six Thomas Scobee s"* of Clarence Scoyiars when Miss Lauder was about bee who reside- north of town broke
Mrs. Opal Cox of South Locust treet underwent a major operation
’ at the County Hoapital TTaillimlljf | HI Tunney was U friend of her his right arm while * ranking a ear iance to the fir* ■ cto *^ y . tqn J> ht 11111 Ei iday. | night. Dr. Ruddol of IraUanapoUa |brotiiarriB-lav, Bdward Dewing, of Wednesday. He and hi- grandfather war time, jus^j* were the iieopic .
sibly Imal thumler "
led warm.
p. m., arriving in Chcago early o-j VV., Sherman and Henry (iruhh. Har tion centered in the southwestern ‘ respondent there soon after midnight, morrow mornng. n-y Crodian had a store and the [lost- part of the island. (said the center of the storm missed Immediately alter the funeral,;office par t of the time. Dr. I,. K Nine ships were leported to have the city, although telephone and teleSmith will return to Albany. | Dilley also had the postoffice and a I been sunk off Celebes Islaiid. 'graph line- were damaged.
o-4 — grist mill, Isaac Firestone owneij the ■ o | o ■ ■» tan yard in the ’40’s, just west of MAY HAVE AIRPORT INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Mr. Davis' pre.-ent home. There wa- j •—o — INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 9. (UP)— also a shoemaker's and a gunsmith’s! There i- a possibility that Putnam'The hog market wa- 10 to 25 cents -hop. One of the Chittingtons had County may have a regularly equip higher at the Indianapolis livestock a store. fied air port. Donald McLean and exchange today. Hulk ( 160 to 275
Other Booneville residents were \iidrew Hint who purcha-ed the Peek James and Zip U*wis Nelson, James Corner at the National road and Hanna, Jonathan Manker, Thomas Road 43 a few days ago, are considSmith. Dave Nelson and Wilson ering the establishment <>f a regulaSpaulding. 1 tion air port at that important eornThe residents of Booneville were er for mail carrying airplanes us divided in the matter of their alleg vll i * ,, Dir commercial (dunes. Union during the Civil This corner is on the trans-conti-
nental air route
# or
Con- perfoimed the operation with the as-
^ iCtaiKL of Dr. Hutchaaou.
Hartford, Conn. Through Dewing, were going swimming when the start- the states from which they and their would be an ideal spot for such
lb-.) hogs cleared the pens at $11.40 to $11.95 with a top price of $12. Receipts were estimated at 4,000. The cattle market was steady on receipt of 750 head. Steers sold for $14.50 to $16. The calves market was steady but tending higher. Vealers brought $16.50 to $18 and heavy east and west and calves $7 to $11.
quite without design, be met her.
er stuck.
fathers bud come.
The Knigh* s of ^ place.
a The sht*«»|) market wa ceipt of 800 head. 4
weak oi
..4
