The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 January 1929 — Page 4

THE GREENCASTLE DAILY BANNER SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1929.

h liny On Easy Terms

Practically every piece of furniture on our second floor is reduced, including floor coverings. A Good Time To Buy. S. C. Prevo Company

A HOME INSTITUTION

bestowpri during: a Rolf tramp ■Rookpfpllpr. —o—

with

PORTLAND—Dr. Clydo Thornburg fornwrly of Redkey, has boon sploct«*d as an instructor of dental surgery at the King George medical college at Lucknow, Indian. Dr. Thornburg is a graduate of Redkey high school and from the Indiana dental college at Indianapolis. He has been in India for more than a year, having been connect ed with Carper and Scherist, American dentists, who have a number of offices in that country. INDIANAPOLIS— Tentative arrangements for the annual Indiana Intercollegiate Press Association meeting • to be held Feb. l. r > andlfi have been completed. The Press Association is composts! of fifteen preses of colleges and universities throughout Indiana. I.'tiers announcing the plans have been mailed the members of the Association, it has i been announced.

J. R. Kissinger To Be Honored

IH'NTINfiTON MAN WHO AIDED IN YELLOW FEVER ( I RE. TO BE HONORED.

“BANNER” WANTS ADa. PAY

M l n\ ER INDI VN \ SOI'Til BEND — Federal Judge Thomas W. Slick of the northern In-

diana district, and Mrs. Slick, have ’ given a dime by John I). Rockefeller two inexpensive mementoes of one of at Ormond Beach, Fla., where they the world s richest men. They were' are on a vacation. The dimes were

I

IF YOU NEED MONEY We Can Accommodate Yoa

QUICKLY

Budget Your Bills Borrow the Money and Pay

Them In Full.

S ^ Mo. Repays $100.00 Loan $14 Mo. Repays $200.00 Loan $21 Mo. Repays $300.00 Loan This le All You Pay. Nothing

Deducted or Added.

INDIANA LOAN CO. 0/11 East Washington St.

^*2 Phone 15

J

' teenemietl Trtnj/erltHtm

7 CHEVROLETj

Qlte Outstanding Chevrolet of Chevrolet History • a fix in the price range of the fourj

represents 4 Y ear s of Development and over a Million miles of Testing

Never has a new motor car come to tlic public more thoroughly proved ineverv detail than The Outstanding Chevrolet of Chevrolet History. A vars ago, the Chevrolet Motor Company designed and built its first experimental six-cylinder motor. This far-sighted step was taken because Chevrolet engineers knew that the six-cylinder motor is inherently the most perfectly balanced motor — the ideal power plant to meet the growing public demand for greater reserve power, faster getaway and, above all — smooth, <juiet performance. During the last four years, over a hundred six-evlinder motors—representing every conceivable type— were built by Chevrolet engineers and tested on the General Motors Proving Ground. This constituted

one of the greatest series of tests ever conducted with any automobile. From time to time, the experimental models were torn down for inspection, redesigning and further testing — until the present motor was developed and pronounced correct. While the new six-evlinder motor was in process of development, other Chevrolet engineers were perfecting other parts of the chassis. And another great automotive organization—the Fisher Body Corporation —w as devoting its gigantic resources to the creation of the finest, sturdiest and most beautiful bodies ever offered on a low-priced automobile. As a result, the Outstanding Chevrolet offers an order of well-balanced excellence that is extraordinary in the low-price field. From every

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standpoint—power, speed, smoorv ness, acceleration and quiet no.— its performance is trulv amazing. Its handling ease and roadability are exceptional. Its economy of operation is so great that it delivers hnur than 20 miles to the gulion of gasoline. And its outstanding beaur , smartness and luxury are exciting w idespread admiration. You owe it to yourself to se? and inspect this remarkable car. Come in today!

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Come in and See these Sensational New Cars — Now on Display L. & H. CHEVROLET SALES

116 North Jackson Street Greencastle, Indiana Q-UfA LM^TaY - AiT ~ LiO.W -

C ; O 1 S T

INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 12. (TP)— Although 28 years have |>as*ed since John R. Kissinger, 'Huntington, subjected himself to the deadly bites of Cuban mosquitoes, following the Span-ish-American war, for experimental purposes, in an effort to find a cure for yellow fever, he is to be recognized officially for the first time next Saturday evening at a dinner sponsored by Indiana medical and scien- ; tifie organizations. Dr. Merritte W. Ireland, surgeongeneral, l'. S. A., will be the principal speaker of the evening. Gov. H. G. Leslie and presidents of the various universities and colleges of the state have been invited as guests for the dinner which will be held in the Riley room of the Claypool hotel. Kissinger was born at Liberty .Mills in Wabash county. He enlisted in the army at the age of l!l at the start of the war with Spain. He was disappointed when he got no farther than Chickumauga before the fighting stopped, but he went to Cuba when the American army took over the occupation of the island following the war. The days of fighting the Spaniards were over but the battle of the white man in the tropics against yellowfever had just started. For 200 years medical science had lieen trying to discover the cause of yellow fever. Major Walter Reed of the Medical Corps was sent to Cuba and asked for volunteers who would permit themselves to be bitten by mosquitoes as test patients in the fight against yellow fever. According to the story, Kissinger was the first volunteer yellow fever patient. The morning he reported, Major Reed drew his hand to his cap and said to Kissinger, "I salute you, sir.” It was one of the few times during the history of the United States army that a major had ever saluted a private. In making his report to the government in Washington Major Reed said, “In my opinion this exhibition of moral courage has never been surpassed in , the annals of the army of the United States.” Only four of the men who permitted themselves to be bitten by the pestilences are living today. Kissinger was discharged from the American Army in 1901. For 12 years his legs were paralyzed completely. During this time his wife supported him with a small pension from the government. Recently, through the efforts of the American Association of Medical Progress, the attention of the government was called to Ids case and he has received a pension of $100 a month. The association has also bought him a small farm near Huntington, where he now lives.

OBITUARY Henry Preston, son of Alijah and Mary Jones Dorsett was born May 12 1847, departed this life Jan. 8, 1929, aged 81 years 7 months and 2fi days. During the civil war he enlisted in Co. B. . r >9th Regiment on the 6th day of September, 1864 for one year or the duration of the war, and was discharged the 17th day of July 1865, at Louisville Kentucky. He took great pleasure in the G. A. R. of which he was an officer and attended all of the encampment-, going to the one at Denver last fall. On March 20th, 1860 he was united in marriage to Maigaret Adams; to this union ten children were bom. In the autumn of 1889 his wife died leaving a large family in his care. , He took up farming, stock buying and auctioneering for his life’s work. For a number of years he cried sale* all over the country. He sold at auction at the Stock Yards at Indianapolis the first hog that was ever shipin-d there by air plane, until his last sickness he had entire charge of his large farm, and helped gather in his last crop of corn. On July 20th, 1903 he was married to Emily Raines Farmer who with six children, a nulhber of grandchildren and great grandchildren, two brothers one sister and a ho-t of friends sur-

vive him.

He often expressed his faith in a just God and said he put his trust in Him, who doeth all things well, so live, that, when thy summons comes to join the innumetuhle caravan. Which moves to that my-terious

realm

Where each shall take his chamber In the silent halls of death,

Then go not like the

night,

Scourged to his dungeon, But sustained and soothed, by an unfalteding trust, Approach thy grave, Like one, who wraps the drapery of his couch about him, Ard lies down to plea-ant dreams. CARD 0 FTHANKS We wish to thank our friends and neighbors for their many acts of kindness and loving sympathy shown to u.s in our riH’ont bproavement. Mrs. Henry Dorsett and children.

quarry slave ai,

VONCASTLE

(HESTER CGNKI.IX

Today Only 2 TO 11 P. M.-10-25c HIS GREATEST LAl’GH SUCCESS ^ wilh MARTHA SLEEPER HUGH TREVOR

AND DON’T

FORGE I THE NEW SERIAL • I AR/AN. THE MIGHTY” STARTS TODAY ADDED (OMEDY “THE BARGAIN HI Yf

SUNDAY ANT) MONDAY

ADDED VONCASTLE ATTRACTIONS “OUR GANG” in “THE SPANKING \GE” KINOGKAM NEWS—BARTON ORGAN

And “( LAIR HULL BAND” Featured

GRANADA

TODAY -

LAST TIM ES

2 to 11 PJ IOo-2.V

SIR HARRY LAI DKR Hiintingtcm

sp iti Stl no th of th el* "P foi de its

ilil

(OMEDY—M. G. M. M W

SUNDAY AND MONDAY

7 AND 9 P. M.

ANNA Q. NILSSON With LEWIS STONE in

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COl vjf 1» de] rej wil

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rec th€ Sti Kri am H chi am em

of

■ pre tin ad; Lie

A ( omedy-Drama for Kvery W ife, gcj Husband, and Kveryone That Hopes Tc ,!u r

Either! em

SMITH

CHAPTER 5

(OMEDV

“EAGLE OF THE NIGHT"

wiff URf,! 1 I

BVNK STATEMENT

Report of the condition of The Citizens Bank at Bainbridge in the State Of Indiana, at the close of its busi-

ness on December 31, 1928. C. K. Hughes, President. J. P. Hughes, Vice-President.

C. K. Hughes, Cashier-Secretary.

RESOURCES

I.oans and Discounts $26,785.46 2 VPr,lrafts None l . S. Gov’t Securities 5,000.00 Other Bonds, Securities, etc. 7,440.06

Furniture and Fixtures Due from Trust Companies Banks and Bankers and ,, Gash on Hand Cash Items Interest Paid

BIGAMIST \ If Iff' 1 ' CRAWFORDS' H I'G. H —Local authoritc - is-lire'l apprehended a bigamist ber of wives rivalled '’ill | harem of King Solonwit ’•I

, old day-.

Hairy Hunley, of thi-

; ed $150 an I cost- and senv* . days on the state penal |

I he pleaded guilty 1“

from Hiram “Happy |

of this city. After th'

iq-.q Z , judge inquirred about bh J ,400.00 marita| affairs . 33,915.33 Hunley married a C ir ‘* 2,219.45 weeks ago and it i- a!''* 24.26 other woman in Anderson22.03 1 for a divorce. The And«*

KX '£1*L 468.12, said she had rulAI $77,224.65 husband who LIABILITIES 'order to marry the

( apital Stock—Paid in ,..$10,000.00 f. ur ': lus None l ndivi<le<l Profits—Net .... 4f>l5.f>3 Demand Deposits 61,906,73 Demand Certificates 4,851.29 J 0 ™’ $77,234.65 State of Indiana, County of Put-

nam, ss:

L C, K. Hughes, President of the Citizens Bank of Bainbridge, Ind., do solemnly swear that the above statement is true. _ . C. K. HUGHES. Subscribed and sworn to before me G is 11th day of January, 1929. ,Sfa,) JUILLE COWGER, Notary Public. •My Commission Expires Nov. 20, 1932

divorced ^ corked witt'

man- *

Ik' WC.Itto

rhi#

said, claimed to

to supiKirt her t*' 1 ’ l their marriage, the . ley tried to get her to a robbery. She refused. ■ he deserted her a shot' ’ ley denied this chargeThe defendant adnti«^ wife in Lafayette but she had obtained n di' was alleged to have ^ from New York about ■

lived her** with her I

married.

Police Chief Shields ^ J Hunley hud been b rmiu ' '■ try marrying girls t,"' 1 .§ tin I is looking f" 1 9

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