The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 September 1928 — Page 3

$300

“just's®?*. n K" ,Vk. KTC. 1 L " ami Small

$20 t0

^. no „

Indiana ix>an

fpPANY ( ItashinKlon St.

* 1 ('June 15.

THE GREEKCASTCE DAJXY BANNER. FRIDAY,

clog the pores

I pure and fine? It is new French Process and

SIFIED ADS

—For Sale— /

Makes Girls parts prove popular More Attractive •' Hl!l:v Nine J Wouldn’t you, too, like a face nowd- ', m<an ' 1 fift yf''e thousand pooer that will keep shine awa\ -~ tav 11 '' , an "‘ in ( ont:i. t this year with 'on longer—sprea<l emoothh - not ,h '' ‘H'artnient 0 f conservation

and always be m tn«»u»h irks, five fish hat”d‘issued Li7 ieR ’ ° ne State ^t, two bird

MFLLO-GI.O. It is surely a wondei- ‘ ln ' ,r '" n, ’ Mv ' :>"d four stat.

ful Face Powder. Just try ME1LO m ' ' "

i Richard l.ieber, state conservation di- , lector, tol.l Rntai i.i:: eve today in a ; luncheon address, u exceeded

1 twenty pe r cent increase

he said.

Of this number he classified IfiO,-

000 as out-ktate visitors leaving 805,-

more than every fourth resi-

. i "''" l ils visiting these Hnosier beau-

Beyond the midnight and the dark > "

» wniio strossintr native scenery as j potential cash because of the troi mendous road expansion programs annually enlarging the field of tourists, i and state parks vitally necessary ac-

SEPTEMBER 21, 1928.

GLO.—Mullins Pharmacy. i" 1 —j—~ — —

OBITUARY

“And her sun went down while

was yet day.”

Another of our loved ones answered (

the call and passed to that Home. !, l00 “Beyond the sunsets’ erim ,,n bars, ' j ,

Beyond the twilight anil the

a

1027,

■■ Unto the dawn of that tomoriow, V Where hearts shall find an end of

sorrow.

And love ^hall find its own.”

In the city of Terre Haute, Nov 0 . f

1906 was horn the subject of thi< brief h'°T ° f '''. r0fr " ational vah " • M '-

•sketch, Mary Belle Junkm .

CWI of William Alva and ' » the mand • of the

conservation department and illus-

CoBCort grape®, $1.60 Cl. L. Buchheit. 19-tf Stl.F:— (ut Dahlias. Orders D or more delivered. Phone 201 jrazier, Greencastle Service [ i!09 N. Jackson St. 19-tf. BALE:—Or will take farm part payment on modern atS room residence in good L oh |. Good terms to reasonLy. 1‘hnne 525-L. 20-3t.

:

yALE Ford Roadster, bmer Griffin, Custodkm

inat 1-p.

Stella have

SALE:—Large r; Hanna Court.

Universal ] 21-2p. |

Jr SALE: Will sell entire )M at 402 Howard St. Tuesday 25th, 130 P. M. Wm. 21-nt.

J.E:—Pears. 14.

H. Knudson. 21-2t

I—For Rent—

RENT:— Two unfurnished ii kitchenette, 310 West Lib.?t. 21-2p.

ILK XT One furnished mod- | Phone 217-Y. 21-3t.

JliENT Furnished modern F •ud location. Phone 20-?t. IRF.NT 3 3-4 acres, good lam. 1-4 mile south of Penn. W il 43. J. ('. Oakley, Rural 7. Iftli*, hid. Phone 509-L. 20-2p. ■ o ■RKVl Twm modern furnish- ■ hiiusckeeping rooms. Reas-Bi-nt. 2 Fast Hanna St. 19-4t. (IF.NT:—Apartments furnish »!'irni-hed. “The Langnioor. If tan kl in St. 17-tf

l?.\T7 riKim semi-modern U Ctilleyf*. Phone ."itlO-V ■M 21-lp

"Lxt~ IMnn and Mini* p.’iirtmcnt. Phone 57 or 4»;8.

18-tf.

' |, \r~5 mom apartment •‘’’•ne 435-V 20 2t .'A' 1 Modern furnished I rno m, also garage, 307 Ohio

20-3 p.

RENT— 50 acrp f arnl w ith hl !; < s . uitahle for trucking, l’“ultry. 8M L, H. Athey. I - 21 • Sf, • m * —Wanted— • ' El) —General housework by ' f " nan- E1,a ,,pnm an, Green-

21-2p

< '7 ,,|ac< ' your orders for U whilp they are in bloom.

razu * r » Greencantle I'hnne 201. p,09 N.

Service Jackson

19-tf.

—Lost-

On the last ^air, woman’s

night cupe-

of thi 1 -Phone

21-2t

of William Alva and

Owen Junkins, both of whom

passed to their eternal home.

Mary Belle was stricken with her final illness while visiting her grandmother Mrs. Mary Junkins in Terre Haute. She was taken to the City Ho-pital in Indianapolis where every effort was made to ward off the inevitable, but death claimed her, after intense suffering, Friday September, 14, 1928 at 2:35 A. M. The span of life between these two events being 21 years, 10 months and 3 days. She moved with her parents at the age of one year to the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. ,J. Owen on Floyd Township, where she remained until death entered the home and claimed the beloved mother, the father having died ere thi . Since the home ties wrro broken -he La- made her home with her uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. George Owen, whose kindness and hospitality were unbounded

and sincere.

On September 4, 1927 he entered the Nurses Training Class of the Indianapolis City Hospital. That she wa highly regarded, and successful in her hospital work was duly attested too, in a telegram her family received from a medical friend reading “Our loss, her gain”, Mary Belle grew to young womanhood experiencing the events of country girl life, busy at home, attending grade school near-hy She was a beloved student and graduate of the Fillmore High School of the class of 1924. She al-o attended DePauw one year. Mary Belle lived a good and useful t life. All of her life’s interests were I centered around her loved ones. What more can he said of any one ? Early in life she was impressed i with religious convictions and united ; with the Wesley Chapel Church, j About a year ago she transferred her; member-hip from there to the Fillmore M. E. Church. She loved the church of her choice and was faithful in attendance and service, doing the Masters’ work. She has been a Sunday School teacher, also expressed a great desire to become a Missionary and had once made some pieparation

therets.

“O Death! Why claim the good and kind ? The noble, both in heart and mind- Why not claim those who do not care, To strew sweet flowers every-where ?” She leave- to mourn their loss two brothers Andrew and Alva. An aged grandmother, Mrs. Mary Junkins whose faithful care and devotion in times of adversity is well known. Ho ts of relatives and friends are here, beside the nearest ami dearest, to testify of their love for her. Is it any wonder that the inspired penman wrote: “Prer r’j- in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints?” Tenderly we care for the physical house where our dear ones have lived; the body which has clothed the spirit is reverently laid away but we know that the coul goes triumphantly on in response to the Masters’ summon- to higher service. We cherish our memories not of one who is dead, but of one who is intensely, joyously alive. We live in expectation of runion with our dear ones when our trial time is over, ami we too, enter the next room of Gods

hons.

“.Nay not goodby: the flowers of

June

May hide their faces all too soon; But while beneath the mold they lie, They say good-night, hut not goodby. Say not goodby, hearts sore distressed For those you mourn are hut more blessed, Are but asleep: they do not die, They say good night, but not good-

by.”

trated the import ; economic scheme

it played in our exi tence.

State departments are, or ought to he, agencies f r the promotion of human welfare and interest, he declared. Government are judged by j the results they achieve in this direction. As our live become more

intricately ordered, so i ia s our

ernment machinery. The conservation department, he pointed out, instead of being an unwieldy governmental branch, has, through consolidation and unification reached a point where ; x divisions nnd nineteen units in the field, with one commission and one e: ecutive officer, does the work more efficiently and economically than could he accomplished by twenty-five separate offices. The speaker took his auditors on a delightful journey hack over past years when pioneers were destructive in order to become constructive; when natural resources seemed inexhaustible; up to the present strenuous period when population density makes mere livelihood a mnji r problem for hundreds of thousands. He spoke of how Hoosiers exploited their 18 000,000 acres of the finest hardwoods ever grown; wore wasteful of natural gas; how wild life hail been ruthh -sly slaughtered and soil fertility wasted, pointed to the cffortshis department is making to turn these great native values. Tiny Uoatkaits in Soi to Copper

Pa are Three PHONE 12. PHONE 12. SATURDAY MARKET

In a Jiffy NEW HEELS

IT TAKICS us only a few min- * utes to put on a new rise or replace a heel. \ml we’re proportionately prompt in putting on soles. AVe use only the best leathers. < barges very moderate.

gov-

Do Yen Agree V/ith ihe Judges?

■ Jill;

VP r-M. , We’l. sir. here are five finalist- in a beauty contest at San Diego, Cal Left to right they are Misses /ora Sheuhcrd, Dorn Harrow, Mildred Wright, Winifred Stevens and Jewel Simmons. W: h was the winner? Miss Stevens took first prize and Miss Da.row sc'ond.

Fresh Pork Bones, lb Beef Brains, lb Fresh Home Made Boloena, II) Fresh Boiling Beef, It) Sugar (Aired Bacon Squares, lb. ... Silver Nut Oleo, lb Fresh Veal Stew, lb Sugar Cured Picnic Hams, 11) Sugar Cured Bacon, y 2 or whole, lb. Fresh Sausage, lb Small Smoked Hams, lb Spring Lamb Boast, lb Fresh Eggs, Cottage Cheese, Frying

.. f)C . 10c . 15c . 15c . 19c . 20c . 20c . 23c . 24c . 25c . 28c . 35c ’hix,

W. H. EITELJ0RGE

i'HONE 12

GOOD HI MING SKA St IN INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 21. (UP)— Prediction of ;i good duck hunting cason in Indiana has been made h\ George N. Mannfeld, superintendent of fisheries and games of the State Conservation department. It is based on the patrol and warden reports that are being received from the varh us game wardens throii"hnut the -tale. One f'.nn the Kankak. e iv . nation in Laporte and Starke eountie pointed out that mam docks of duck have already been I ighted IIviny outh, which i- imlicai live of an early season with much good > hunting, in Mannfold’ opinion. The season open: on Oct. 1 and continues until .Ian. 15.

WE DELIVER.

Similar nptimi tie predictions were made by Mannfeld regarding the plentifnlness of both rabbits and quirrels. Season on thi game opens on the same date. Better panto fishing i- also promi ed by the department, which is now clearing Lake Maxinkuckee of gar and dogfish and giving the sporty c atche ■ a chanee to lire rugate. Tv/o men have netted hundred ; of pound: ef the pteviltg ft It floill the la!; ■, ipi'Uiding the large t gar ever reported to the department. It was ,| in ho ! ’ ; and weighed 30 pound-. Suva a fish will eat between alt* and tain pounds of game fish annually, Mannfeld declared. j

I SIJiiSCKiBB I OK r iDR BANNKM

Hoover Returns Emm

to Washington

~ |

■Mijcellaneon*— 7, ' k ' nP * P|jIps f, tr sale. Phone | ton’ Cm* l ' I' Uk cut In mol \ « ®«th and *, mil. [ tU *7 21-lp. fj ,ri l> to Paris witj, Trl K . |p> I It C? p a p r r u aturday niKht - i at Morton. Everybody

m-M:

' ~ A 'A.,

tf i?

'

kiw

U P —Vn<!rrwowl.

The Republican candidate leaving Trenton. N. J. for the National Capital after completing a campaipn tour of Upper New Jersey,

nominee is shown with his son and Mrs. Hoover.

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UP Luis Angel Firpo. “Wild Bull of the Pampas.’’ training for • H rnmeback Note the bulge at the waistline and get an idea of how Umg Luis will have to punch the bag to regain a sylph-hke furur.