The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 March 1929 — Page 2
THE GREENCASTLE DAILY BANNER,
TUESDAY, MARCH 19,1929.
VONCASTLE
TODAY AND WED 2:15-7 AND 9 !\ M. 10c-30c COiUHMA MCTUItftf
JP RALPH CRAVH imit MUX 'iuwt.Jtj FA It C. KEKTOH ! lin MOST IM S( U. ( IK( I S DR AM A KVKR SHOWN
< DMEDY
TONIGHT
TOPK S—FABLES
( FAIR Ilf LI S B AND
AT 8:4ft P. M.
( OMINO THUR. AND FRIDAY “The Canary .Murder Case” lllllfllllllllll
Granada THURSDAY ONE NIGHT ONLY GREATEST LAW AND OUTLAW PICTURE IN AMERICA “PASSING of the OKLAHOMA OUTLAWS” FEATURING THE DALTON GANG AL JENNINGS HENRY STARR FACTS—HISTORY—THRILLS —ACTION SEE OKLAHOMA IN 1893—A GREAT MORAL LESSON
THE DAILY BANNER Entered in the Post Ottice at Greencastle, Indiana, aa second class mail matter. Under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, 10 cent* per week.
Personal And Local News
Phone All Social Items To 95.
Air. and Airs. E. B. Taylor Announce Engagement
•Mr. and «Mrs.
I’utnanmlle Aleets
b ” will assist the hostess in the soc-
| ia! hour. + d" + -E ■!• +
K. R. Taylor an-1, ;ldieg Ajd (>f nouijff* thf* of their daughter, Miss Eunice to Edward N.
Wendell of Boston, Mass. Mr. Wend- The Ladies Aid of Putnamville met ell is in Madrid, Spain, at present, at the home of Mrs. Mabel Talbott
Bladder Weakness If Bladder Weakness, Getting Up Nights, Backache, Burning or Itching ! Sensation, leg or groin pains make | yc.u feel old, tired, pepless, and worn out, why not make the Cystex 18 Hour Test? Don’t give up. Get Cystex today at any drug store. Put it to a 48 hour test. Money back if 1 you don’t soon feel like new, full of pep, sleep well, with pains alleviated. Try Cystex today. Only liOo.— R. P. Mullins, Druggist.
The wedding will take place in the near future. Miss Taylor is now studying art in Paris. 4* *1* + -S- + S, C. ( . Club To Meet Tuesday Miss Lucille Glidewel), 101 So. Locust street will he hostess to members of the S. . C. Club Tuesday evening at 7:30 o’clock. •P + + + + + Plan To Observe 27th Anniversary The Modern Priscilla Club met on Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs, Heber Ellis, 615 E. Seminary street and held election of officers, which resulted as follows: Pres., Mrs. Renton Curtis. Aire., Mrs. W. R. Hutcheson. Treas., Mrs. Charles Broadstreet. lv r’y., Mrs. Bessie Goldberg. I Ians were made to observe the 27th anniversary of the founding <f the club with a luncheon or dinner Monday, April 1st at the home of Mrs. Charles Broadstreet, 511 K. Seminary
S' r et.
+ + 4 , + + 4* The W. H. M. S. To Meet Wednesday The Womans Home Missionary Society of the Methodist Church will
Wednesday afternoon March 13th with Mrs. May me Smith and Mrs. Hazel Evans assisting were hostesses Thirty two members and 6 visitors were present. After the business ses--ion the meeting was turned over to the program committee which was carried out in St. Patrick’s Day style. The hostess served ice cream, cake, ami coffee. •f + + 4- -E L. F. F. Bridge Club Will Meet Wednesday The L. F. F. Bridge 1 Club will meet with Mrs. Elmer Huber at her home on N. Madison St.) Wednesday evening at 7:30 o’clock. ••• + *4- + * Memorial Given For Mrs, George Lewis The Mt. Pleasant Needle Club met with Mrs. Jesse Jones at her city home on Last Washington St., with 11 members and three guests present. Two guessing contests were held, with Mrs. Earl Coffman and Miss Lorene Knauer receiving the
prizes.
The hostess was assisted by her si'ter, Mrs. Jesse Young at serving time. A memorial period was observed for Mrs. George Lewis, president of the club, who has passed away
mcit Wednesday affernoon at 2:30 since the last meeting.
o’clock at the home of Mrs. C. C.
Gillen, l(H Bloomington, St.
Mrs. Courtney will have charge of the devotions. Mrs. Ferd Lucas will present the lesson and Mrs. Pedlow will sing. Mrs. Gray ami her commit-
A short poem as follows was given: Her loving heart is now at rest, God took her home when he thought best When we are done with toil and care, W e hope to meet her over there.
Dl A1 W GRAD RESIDENT : 1013, and taught for the next few SECRETARY FOR MRS. OWEN [years in Delphi High School. He resigned before the end of his fourth
When Mrs. Ruth Bryan Gwen became representative in the congress
term to enlist in the army and attend the officers training camp. Mr.
sion to study those parts of the problem separately. In the event these two subcommissiotis are able to reach a sufficient measure of agreement a second meeting of the preparatory commission can then he convoked for later in the year, probably in the fall after the September League assembly. In the event the commission is then able to adopt its draft disarmament commission, it will still be necessary to allow six months to elapse for the various governments to study the project before convoking the final conference for its adoption. This delay of six months has always been accorded by the League for the study of all draft conventions, and it is considered especially necessary in the present instance in order to allow the new administration at Washington and the new English government that will come into power in July ample time for establishing their disarmament policy. As a con-p(|Uence there is no possibility of the League’s first general disarmament conference being held until well into 1930. To offset this delay, however, the League expects to be able to convoke for this year its first international conference for the progressive codification of international law. This conference will he held at the Hague in the fall.
SOMETHING TO WORK FOR
Fla. Mr. Buckingham is a Phi Gam-
ma Delta at Del’auw.
NO 1829 (ONFKRENUK
from the Fourth district of Florida R '; ,ckin 8 ha ^ now lives at Vero Beach,
March 4, .she named as her “resident secretary” a former Indiana young man, a graduate of Depauw University and a member of the first officers’ training camp held at Ft. Benjamin Harrison. A resident secre-1
tary is in itself something new and GKNKVA » Mar. 19. (UP)—League has been created by Mrs. Owen that ° f Natlons circl,,s hav e informed the the people of her district may feel 1 L ’" itp<l I,r, ’ ss thi,t th,,re wil1 ^ no that th. ir representative is “as near possibilit y of a general dis-
as their nearest telephone,” to use her own expression. The resident secretary is to remain in the state, is to keep in close touch with the problems of the district, is to visit the eighteen counties at regular intervals and on call when necessary. Mrs. Owen’s district extends from Jacksonville to Key West and includes the largest seacoast in the
United States.
“The young man whom 1 have chosen for this position has the interest of the district at heart as I have, is a man of high ideals in whom I have the utmost confidence,” said Mrs. Owen to a few of us who had met at the home of Mrs. Samuel M. Ralston to have breakfast with the congres--
woman-elect.
“And who is this young man that is to be at the heck and call of your constituency?" I asked. “A young man by the name of Walter Buckingham,” she answered. “Formerly of Indiana?" I asked, and she nodded her well coiffured
head as she
same”,
Walter Buckingham was bom and reared at Morristown. He was graduated from DePauw in the class of
armament conference this year. The earliest date it was declared at which such a conference can be convoked will be in the spring of 1930, hut it i> more than probable that it will be well along in the fall before
it cun he held.
This delay is due purely to the present lack of progress in the preparation for the conference. It will be necessary it was pointed cut, that the League's Preparatory Disarmament Commission must have at least two more sessions before agreement can be reached on n draft project for a general disarmament
convention.
The first of these meetings has already been fixed for April 15. While it had been hoped that the commission might at that time proceed to the second reading of the draft disarmament project which it prepared last year, it is now considered doubt • ful if even that can be done at the
present time.
Instead it is believed more than
probable that the commission which
aid smilingly, “the very heretofore has insisted on handling
the military, naval, and aerial aspects of disarmament in plenary session,
will now be forced to appoint at least tion the National Dairy Show a military and a naval subcommis- permanently be located at St. Louis.
Indiana’s 4 H dairy calf club boys and girls now have something tangible to strive for. Announcement has just been made by G. L. Noble, secretary of the National Cnmmittoe on Boys and Giris Club Work, that a prizo trip to the National Dairy Show at St. Louis, Octohor 12 to 19, awaits the hoy or girl who does the best work in tho calf club project this year. The trip, said Mr. Noble, will be financed by the Blue Valley Creamery Institute, which believes thoroughly in 4-H club work a< a means of developing the highest type of citizens among farm youth and as a way of interesting farm boys and girls in better dairying. Hhe trip carries with it all the necessary traveling, hotel and other expenses, giving the winner a full week in which to study and enjoy himsef at the “great annual roundup of the dairy industry.” Eligibe to compete for the trip are all bona fide dairy calf club members working under the supervision of the -tate college extension service whose records are up to date, except those who had previously been awarded trips to the National Dairy Show. Winners wil be determined at county and state fairs by an elimination system, the final choice resting with the state club leader. In addition to furnishing the trip for the Indiana dairy calf club champion, the Blue Valley Creamery Institute is also awarding a similar trip in Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, West Virginia and AVisconsin. Close to one hundred of these trips have been given by the Institute since it awarded its first trip to the National Dairy Show in 1924. Previous winners of the Blue Valley Creamery Institute trips in Indiana have been Rovena McHane. Morristown; John McClain, Franklin; I^la Kemp, Kempton; Velma Berkey, Flora; and Fred Dixon, Economy. Beginning with this year's exposi-
will
Leon Welch is driving a new Oldsmobile. Edgar Prevo was a business visitor in Indianapolis Tuesday. Ewell Stark was a business visitor in Indianapolis Monday. Roy Walters was a business visitor in Indianapolis Tuesday. Mrs. Emma Lovett of near Putnamville -pent Tuesday in Greencastle. W. T. Brooks of Bowling Green was a business visitor in Greencastle Mon-
day.
Miss Wilhelmina Lank and Mrs. L. D. Snider spent Monday in Indiana-
polis.
Gene Chenoweth was a business visitor in Indianapolis Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Albert l.angdon of Eminence was a business visitor in Greencastle Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Ferrell Tunget and Mrs. B. E. Lemon of Spencer visited here today. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Akers of Reelsville spent Monday with Mrs. Thomas Hunter and daughters. The Greencastle Band will practice Thursday night at 7:30 o’clock. Members requested to be present on time. .Air. and Mrs. Leslie McCollum, Northwood, are the parents of a son bom to them Monday at the Putnam County hospital. The local Moose Lodge, No. 1592 will meet in icgular -ession on Wednesday evening at 8 o’clock. All members are urged to attend. Misses Juanata .Stroup, Margaret Jane Lawson and Frances Rubino all of Frankfort are spending the week with Miss Angeline Concillo. Mrs. Ann Walsh is seriously ill at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Geo. Morse, in Cambridge City. Mrs. Walsh’s death is expected at any
time.
A Home Packing truck and a Ford sedan collided at the corner of College and Washington Streets, Monday afternoon. No great damage was
done.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Carlyle of Alvion, ill., spent the week-end with Mrs. Lou Hillis and daughters, Mrs. Florence Watson and Mrs. George Knauer. C. Y. Hillis, 408 W. Walnut St., underwent an operation at the County Hospital Tuesday for hernia. Dr. M. R. Coombs of Terre Haute and Dr. J. F. Gillespie performed the operation. Mrs. R. X. Cox underwent an emergency operation at the County hospital Monday evening for relief from appendicitis. Dr. T. B. Noble, Jr., of Indianapolis was assisted in the operation by Dr. W. M. McGaughey. The regular meeting of the Putnam County Democratic club will be held Saturday at 2:15 o’clock in the Law Libiary of the Court House. It is important that every member be present as this is a business meeting. Jonathan W. Knauer, administrator of the estate of George M. Miller versus Daniel Miller et al is the title of a petition for the sale of real estate filed in the circuit court Monday aft. ernoon. Hays and Murphy are the attorneys for the plaintiff. The funeral of John P. Burdett was held from the Brick Chapel church Tuesday morning at 10:30 o’clock with the Rev. Hruttain in charge. Mr. Burdett passed away Sunday morning at the home of his son, Hugh in Monroe township after an illness of several year-. o —
FLOOD FUND ■INDIANAPOLIS. Mar. 19 (UP)—| One thousand dollars for the rein , work of the American Legion Auxiliary areas in Alabama was fired frorn National headquarters of the Auxili- ; aiy here today to the Alabama -tate organization. The Auxiliary is taking an active part in feeding, clothing and housing the refugees and in aiding the families of World War veterans among the sufferers, according to reports from Mrs. Tom Salter, Alabama State president. COLEMAN TO FARMERS MARION, March 19 (P)_“The greatest farm relief that can come to an individual farmer is for him to know how to do his job more successfully and more efficiently. Education thus becomes the greatest help in agri cultural problems,” stated Prof. T. A. Coleman, head of Purdue university extension department. He spoke to a group of leading farmers and business men of the county outlining a county farm program. He also pointed out the great educational work being accomplished by county agents.
ALL OVER INDIANA —o— VALPARAISO— A large and noisy celebration was -taged here last night when it was learned that a $500,000 endowment had iieen obtained for Valparaiso University and that the school now is fully accredited.
LADIES’ GLOVES
Bl“k— I " 0n ' 1 '’ 4*5 $2.98 AND $3.50 Pf -
$1.25 ANI '$1.50 «■
THE QUALITY SHOP
J. H. Pitchtord
WEDNESDAY’S FIVE BEST WEAK and NBC network, 6:30 p. m.—Bourdon’s orchestra. WOR and CBS Network, 7 p. m.— Hank Simmons’ show boat. WEAK and NBC Network, 8:30 p. m.— Revellers, soloists and Haenchen’s orchestra. WOR and CBS Network, 9 p. m.— Symphony orchestra. WJZ and NBC Network, 9 p. m.— The Continentals.
PUTNAMVILLE Miss Mildred Smith visited Mrs. Will Glidewell at Fillmore over the week-end. Mrs. Mabel Talbott and daughter, 1 Wilma, visited at the Halfway House, Sunday. Mrs. Stella Carrington and son, Donald, and Mrs. Roy Blue visited Mrs. Jim Haltom, Sunday of Cloverdale. There has been a big crowd every night at the meeting in the Community House. It will be giving on every night this week. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Renfro and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cooper visited their aunt in Bloomington over the week-end. .Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nicely of Brazil visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe Nicely and family, Sunday. Several from here attended the Quarterly meeting at Mt. Meridian, Sunday. Mrs. Mazie Bridges visited her mother at Manhattan, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Minard Hague entertained Mr. Swarens, our preacher, Sunday, and also Miss Pauline Nicely.
tin and family. Arvel Roach and family, and Clay Bettis spent Sunday with George Pierce and wife. Afternoon callers were Sam Lloyd and wife, Mose Manker and daughter, Marie, Ralph Alspaugh, Elbert Bettis and family. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thomas and children spent one day last week with Abner Sigler. Eugene Staggs continues to prove. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Crodian daughter, Gale, called on Mr. Mrs. Chas. Goddard one night week. George and Hiram Slavens of Waveland were here for the funeral of Caleb Bament, Sunday. Word has been received here of the death of Wm. Holland, who passed away at his home in Michigan one day last week.
inland and last
CAN A AN CHAPEL Mr. and Mrs. Richard Atkinsm-i 1606 South 12 street, spent Satlu with Mr. and Mrs. Ross F. HasV They are not having Sunday scU j and church at the r a naan M. r Church because of the condition oltWj roads and weather. Gilbert Girton has been workinzfhis brother Albert. j Fredie Ruberger called on Mr. i Mrs. James T. Beaman Sunday mo*] ing. James Albright spent Sunday wjft Mr. and Mrs. Henry Albright of ft*, zil. George W. Young spent Sundi, morning with Mr. and Mrs. Ross f Hassler. M r. and M rs. S. P. Best visited foft, in this vicinity Sunday. Mrs. Samuel Owens Sr., who hJ been on the sick list is recoveriny,
PORTLAND MILLS Vance Clodfelter was out of school last week with the mumps. Mr. and Mrs. John Schoen and children of Indianapolis spent the day Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Schoen. Mrs. Schoen returned home after a week’s visit. Floyd Porter left Monday for Detroit. Misses Ruth Harbison and Rose McGill spent the week-end with home folks. lister Sewell started his huckster wagon, Monday. T. C. Calvert papered every daylast week. Ralph Clodfelter had the measles last week. Aunt Mary Ruth Hamilton is low at this writing. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Rivers and son spent the day Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ott Rivers and children. In the afternoon they motored to Waynetown.
FLINT & CONRAD
The home of Rood meat— Staple and fancy) groceries—fresh fruits and vegetables. Cdve Us A Trial.
PHONE 755-Y.
WE DELIVER
CLINTON FALLS Caleb Bament passed away at his home, one mile northwest of Clinton Falls, Thursday night. His funeral was held here at the M. P. Church, Sunday at 11 o’clock in charge of Rev. H. A. Sherrill. The remains were laid to rest in the cemetery nearby. Mose Manker and daughter Marie of Indianapolis and Ralph Alspaugh of Greencastle, spent Sunday with Elbert Bettis and family. Charlie Cloe is very ill at this time. Mrs. Lida Pieree and Mrs. Eula Staggs called on Mrs. Millie Goddard, Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Snider and children spent Sunday with Arthur Brat-
CLOSING OUT SALE As I am quitting the music store business I will offer my entire stock at bargain prices. This sale will continue for the next 10 days. SPECIAL I 900 Victor Records 5 for $1 while they last. 12-ineh Red Seal Records. Regular price, 81.25 Sale Price 75c 10-inch Red Seal Records, Regular Price. 75c, Sale Price 50c Reduced prices on Atwater-Kent Radios (Battery sets). Before you buy elsewhere, come in and see us. J. E. Cash Music Shop
.00 In Coupons
.00 In Cask
ALL OVER INDIANA —o—KOKOMO— Copper pipe will replace lead in running lines from water main- 1 to Kokomo residences, the Kokomo Water Go., announces. Economy is announced as the reason for the change,
As a special advertising offer we are giving our patrons $5.00 i 11 f° r $1.00 cash. These coupons save your 20% on every dollar spend. (iet your coupon book NOW from our representative who wid
on you.
IDEAL CLEANERS
23 S. Indiana.
We Call For And Deliver.
phone
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