The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 March 1929 — Page 2
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THE GREENCASTEE DAILY BANNER, FRIDAY, MARCH 22. 1929.
Breakfast Bacon, 3 lbs. or more, 25c Picnic Ham, lb 20c Minced Ham, lb 30c Weiners, lb 30c
( Hi VI RY ( U K
PRUNES
2 1*01 Mi < VIMON
23c
Sardines IN TOMATO S \ ITK OV\L CAN 3 for 25c
DEL MONTE PRUNES
2 POI ND CARTON
COI M RY (M R
KIDNEY BEANS
2
cans
SAVE 24c
FLOUR
One large size Vanilla Eatracl selliiiR at 2lr. given free nith each 21 ll». ban ( <iiiillrj Club Flour. •
89c
Ivory Soap Flakes Small size. .. 3 for 25c Large size .. 2 for 43c
2
GRAHAM CRACKERS
28c
Pound ('arton
COCO \MT RITTER CREAM ICED LAYER CAKE 22c
MACAROON
SNAPS KROGER RAKED Lb, 17c
250 Oranges, 2 l)oz 288 Oranges, 2 Doz Head Lettuce 3 for 25c Leaf Lettuce 2 lbs. 25c
( o VTFSMI.LE LAD IN HAD R alph Spears lit years old, of FindI iy,G., and .Marion Runten, 17 years rid, of Coat' nilh . lnd., are ehaigcd eonimitting rohhery while armed. Police say the two youths have conf 'SFtil lohhing tw University of Jlet.oit studeijts ami taking $.T.50 and : mK* cigarette.-. The boy admitted, the police raid,
that they had driven to Detroit from Toh do in a stolen automobile. Marion Runten is the son of Mrs. Alpha Runten, residing srAitheafd of Fillmore. The.ycuth attended | the grade schools at Fillmore and was well liked by tho^e with whom he came in contact. Tlis father is Clyde Runten, who lives in Indianapolis. His parents are separated.—Danville Republican.
FLINT & CONRAD Home killed meats fresh and cured pork cuts that are really better. A trial will convince you. We carry a complete line of fresh fruits and vegetables, staple and fancy groceries, always priced right. It is our aim to build up to quality rather than down to price. WE DELIVER Rhone 755-Y. Phone 755-Y.
lighter and more delicious b a Kings
1
•i»
our
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for all'purposes
THE DAILY BANNER Entered in the Post Gliice at Greencaatle, Indiana, aa second claaa mail matter. .Under the act of March 3, i 1879. Subscription price, 10 eenta per week.
Personal And Local News
Phone All Social Items To 95.
Mrs. J. A. Throop was a business visitor in Terre Haute Wednesday. Mrs. Clayton Hurt of Crawfordsville spent Friday in Greencastle. Mrs. Oscar Owens of Clayton spent Thutsday in Greencastle with friends.
Mrs. Leach To Give
Recital Tonight
The Morning Musicale has issued nvitations for a recital to be given under the auspices of the club this •vening at the Second Ward School Auditorium by Charlotte Van
•Vickie I^>aih.
Mrs. Leach, who gave up her work in Chicago to accompany her husband, Prof. Leach, to Greencastle, brings to this reeital the rich
Earl Murbarger of St. Louis was a | fruits of a wide experience in eonbusim ss visitor in Greencastle, Fri-1 cert and recital, in opera, having day. i been at one time a member of the
| Century Opera Company of New
r.nfhdu!e I York , an( | j n church singing, as so>usine» i | 0lst at t h,, First Congregational
Chuirh in Omaha and more recently
James Srown of near was in Greencastle
Thursday.
on
for the past several years as solo soprano at the First Methodist Church, the skyscraper Chicago Temple. She was also a member of the faculty of Rush Conservatory in Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis phic;;
for tw.f’weeks treatment.
Rev. V. L. Raphael has returned from Lima, Ohio, where he attend) d
the funeral of a relative.
Mrs. Jennie Curtis Hearst is in the
NEW Dresses For Every Type $10.75
Georgettes, prints crepes. Fashions frocks for Spring.
and | sniatl
THE QUALITY SH( J. H. Pitehford
Miss Velma M!eryweather under went an operation at St. Vincent hospital. Dr. Karl Ruddell performed the
operation.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Zeis returned Friday morning, after spending the past three months at various points of interest in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Richardson have returned to their home in Liberty, after a brief visit with Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Hamrick, north Jack-
son street.
Will Irvin is in Detroit, Mich., visiting Lt. and Mrs. Frank Irvin. He will return home next week, returning by airplane, with his son, Lt. Irvin at the controls.
Bertrand Huestis returned to the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. (’. C. Huestis Thursday from the hospital where he had been recovering from an
operation for appendicitis.
:;go.
Mrs. Rowland Leach
Her program tonight will include songs of both the classic and modem composers. . +++++*
Floyd Payne Weds Iowa Girl
Miss Jinnie McConaghie, a popular local girl and a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James McConaghie of Farmington, was united in marriage to Floyd Papne of Greencastle, Monday, March 4, it was announced today. The wedding took place at the parsonage of Rev. Bonham pastor of the Presibyterian church in Council Bluffs
Iowa.
Indianapolis.— Jackson Ohio Herald. The family will be remembered by Greencastle residents as they lived
here for a number of years.
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W. F. M. S. To Celebrate
KOth Anniversary
DIRECTOR OF DAM PROJECT
SPEAKER M I NIVKRSITY
FRIDAY.
Dr. Elwood Mead, director of the j bureau of reclamation of the U. S. I)f partment of the Interior, was introjducid as the University chapel speak|er by Roy O. West, president of the ! DePauw Board of Trustees, as “the
The Woman's Foreign Missionary I most distinguished exponent of reSociety of the Methodist Church is|elamation and irrigation that has livplanning to hold a birthday party in ed.” Dr. Mead talked on the great
They will make their home in Gret- eelehration of the sixthieth annivers-j R„uld< r-Canon dam, the building of na, Nebr., where the groom has a re- iir .v of th '' organization on Wednesday | which he will superv ise,
sponsible position with the American •■vening March 27th in the parlors of. Telephone and Telegraph company. 1 th< ' d'urch. Mrs. Evelyn Riley Nich-
olson National President of tin
stream, and the levee* thr J 1,11111 mu ' t ' "n tantly iJl '•t is evident that sotm-thu-T
done soon. The
SPEAKS HEREi^SHs I Imperial valley, including
DR. ELWOOD MEAD IS CHAPEL VV y,,nu " l ' r ' N ' w '■•xicn.li
Anzona, and California. The population and
afford the dam, ami there,
drain in the way of
rest . f the j, . a; A The Uni', d na- ■ J invested ii. the luin au o'J Mr. West -aid this had i».!|
cessfuliy handl'd v, |e
has returne $130,0110,0(10 j
0
GENKR \|. ( o.MiTiuvJ
The community unites in wishing I ol8on National President of the orthis popular young lady a long and ' Kanization, will be the guest of honor, happily wedded life.— Farmington, nn<1 K' vr an address. All members of Iowa Exchange. | the church or friends interested in
Mission work are cordially invited, to
Former Greencastie Girl j°' n UR on th 's occasion. It will be
Weds Ohio Man neces-ary however to
Announcement has been made of sut 'h intention to Mrs. Chandler, Mrs.
The radio program at the Univer-|lhe marriage of Miss Edith Singleton, or ^ rRi Briggs, not later than r7VJIlWy.j.yfJfmYl nn will consist of °f Greenca-tle, to Thomas Stevens of Monday morning, thattpuil r"Ax
Chillicothe, Ohio. rtffllfrrly cared for in trm'im'phratio
The wedding took place at eight p. Die banquet.
an address' “The Secret of the Power of Jesus,” by the president, and music under the direction of Dean R.
G. McCutchan.
Macy Watkins, former Putnam county man and who is now connected with the Detroit Trust Company, will speak over the radio next Tuesday evening from 8 until 8:30 o’clock at Station WGBF at Evansville. A. L. Goodenough and daughter, Carol, have gone to Louisville, 111., after Mrs. Gootlenmrghi'who has been vi-iting her daughter, Betty who is teaching in the high schism! there. They will return Sunday afternoon. Peoples Savings Bank of Evansville versu> Elmer E. Allen is the title of a suit filed in the circuit court Friday morning by Hays and Murphy, attorneys for the plaintiff. The action is for the fon closure of a mortgage. William Jackson visited hi- brother, James Jackson at the Soldiers Home at Lafayette Thursday. Mr. Jackson who has been sick, is improving nicely and his friends here will be glad to know that he is able to be around and is enjoying himself very well. FARMERS HOLD CORN LAFAYETTE, Hid., Mar. 22. (UP) —Indiana farmers held more than a third of last year’s corn crop still on their farms March 1, according to figures compiled by the department of agricultural statistics of the Department of Agriculture and Purdue university Agricultural Experiment Station. Information gathered March 1 indicated farmers still had 56,4H.'t,000 bushels of corn on their farms. This is a third more than last year hut 21 per cent below the average for the ten preceding years. Hoosier farmers usually feed about 85 per cent of their corn to livestock. Following the largest crop in the history of the state, farm holdings of oats are the largest since 1921. Present stocks are 205 per cent of a year ago and 150 per cent of the ten year average. Barley stocks are the largest since 1021, being more than three and a half times those of a year ago, and more than double the ten year average. Farm holdings of rye are only 42 per cent of a year ago. The supply of farm labor was reported as being 00 per cent of normal, the same as last year.
ASK ACCOUNTING
m. on Thursday, January 31st, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. 1). Peters East Main Street, the ring ceremony being performed by Dr. W. B. Taylor
of the ( hrutiah church.
Mis. Stevens was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Singleton hith deceased. She attended high school at
Bloomington, III., received advanced ' under t education at DePauw University, and'stir Greencastle an i at Teachers College F.llis.
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Woman's Club Will Meet Saturday Afternoon
Dr. Mead is a native of India, a
graduate of Purdue university, was for eight years a professor at the University of California, and a number of years with Colorado Central college, a lecturer for p number of years at Harvard university, and en-
communicate! K ’ m ‘ er ^ ,,r l ^e State of Wyoming. At
t(t,e request of the British Government at two different time- Dr. Mead . linstituted reclamation and irrigation projects in Australia, at two different times at Palestine, also in Cuba, also in Canada. He is soon to go to
Cuba again to reclaim lands. According to Dr. Mead the U. S.
LAPORTE, Mat. 21 ,mj Ham Laing of the fnreipi partment of the AdriM Company here, has'mind from Mexico witl t count of iiu Men: - 1 v J revolution, inclu ing a f an merit, from which onlyu>|
erged alive.
While in Terreon,
the triply fatal encounter, ihtr and civilian wen • nrinifl merit. Suddenly i:,. • 'if knife, plungi it ir . '..vaJ hath and causing ■ oJ Two rehi I offii • rs .ppafl grabbed the \ 1 ndor, t * 'dfl knife, intending to .-la; 'htli the bulled at rack | his life. T'n fruit |M; tf
The Woman’s .Club will meet Sat-, fi,,VPrnn ^'i^. hns ,, pi lut '" 1 *^000,. urday affermSWK MarchJtXrd, at .tWo-j 000 fo1 ofThe Boulder-
thirty o’clock^ Jt th<* hrtnke Ifcfc J£anon Dam. It is to br self-support-i loose an. start*! to run, tn*.
W. M. McGaughey. Mrs. C. J AnmhU **’ ,,nyinR for itsrlf in f j t program foa. Ah* after*.wm hL J.'.'L' 11 ," 1 " lil l ”' , ’ l,i 11 h^liUc “Jtonxanfes of the iBea T? F iW l :1 fou '' P erc '' nt - ■ \W1 be afti#ed by Mrs. Earl lrV 'he need of
MOOSE NOTH K
Loyal order of Moose will hold a special meeting Saturday evening March 23, for initiation and feed. All members requested to lie present. By Order of Commottee. PEORIA HAS FIRE PEORIA, .III., March 22 (UP)—A spectacular fire destroyed a three story brick building in the heart of Peoria today, heavily damaged an adjoining structure, and perhaps took two lives. Firemen Dick Keufel and Tom O’Connor were believed to hare been killed by the collapse of the roof of the Peoria Market. Pro petty loss was estimated at $200,000.
TEACHERS LOSE JOBS BROCKVILLE, lnd., Mur. 22. (UP) —The tenure law has resulted in ten teachers in Brookville schools losing their jobs. Those released include A. J. Reifel, superintendent, high and grade school teachers. • All three members of the school lioard voted in favor of the dismissals. The board declared till those released had given satisfactory service and the tenure law was the only rea son for letting them out.
Charles J. Arnold is the defendant in a suit for an accounting filed in the circuit court Friday afternoon by Cecil Bartlett. Theodore Crawley is the attorney for the plaintiff, and the accounting is for $2355.30, asset- of a sale held by the two men.
Eat your Sunday dinner at the Crawford Hotel. Turkey 75c, Roast Pork or Swiss Steak, 36c. - 22-2t.
MURDERS SOLVED GARY, lnd., March 22. (UP)— A series of ax murders and beatingthat have spread terror in Gary was believed solved today when Gillh Mack, 28 year old negro, confessed that he dubbed a young man and woman and stood by while a rompanion beat a 20 year old girl to death anti attacked her. Mark has been under arrest since Wednesday, after the body of .MisJosephine Adoriz.zi was found in a vacant lot. A bloodstained hatchet, found in Mack’s home, was used to club Miss Adorizzi to death, he said, while he stood guard. He refused to name his companion. Miss Mary Gigl, 16, and Chester Dyhalski, 19, are in a hospital as a result of having been beaten by Mack. Miss Gigl is not expected to recover. Miss Adorizzi disappeared Sunday night when she went to meet her fiance. Two boys, playing in the vacant lot, discovered her body Tuesday under a pile of rubbish.
the dam,
saying thus the saucer-like depression
____________________ between Colorado and California is ' entirely yncloi'd.. While the Colorado police f. und was used to kill Thomas | river is jttJvo/it and the matter of irGordon, a negro, who was found dead | rigating it is simple; there is the
danger of the overflowing of the river. A large amount of silt is depositied every year, building up the
in his flat last week.
He said his companion killed Gor-
lon.
maining offii < r bn.ucht with a well di • ’"i
aid walked ■ ’J
cape with his life.
I-aing said that grnenlj in Mexico wi " •Ii • lation, mo tl Y dirty, is living under 1 < is4|
of conditions.
*He furthi 1 aid I ’ lii3 | had occurred and that the! general wa - in an uproar,
LIKE THEIR LUXRIES INDIANAPOLIS, Mar. 22 (UP)— Silks and cosmetics are a- much in ^ favor with the rural flapper as withjltlf her city cousin, Floyd B. Nichols, =£ Topeka, Kan., managing editor of the 1 is rapper farm press, declared before the IQ Indianapolis advertising club here. | Q “Rural markets offer advertiser- *^ one of the righest fields in America”'S He said. “Our farmer folks are living in modem homes and are demanding |S| modem conveniences.”
FUGITIVE HELD INDIANAPOLIS, Mar. 22 (UP)—| < barged with laing a fugitive from! Ander.-on where he was wanted on two .charges of obtaining money under! false pretences, Floyd Craig, 41, was held in jail here today. It was considered likely that he would he taken to Anderson later in the day.
Permanent Waves $5.00 I have a special on permanent wava from Mar. 25th to April 15th. hive ti* test curls with every wave. VANITY BEAUTY SHOPPE
RUTH E. TODD
hOR RENT:—5 rooms semi-modern south half of double, with garage, 112 South Jefferson St. Phone 710-L. 22-3t
Star Barber Shop
Phone 12<(
Mack also confessed that the ax! search Club.
OBJECTS TO REPORT Alta Trout Meeks, through her at-j tomey John E. Hamilton, filed in the! probate court Friday morning an objection to the final report of James | O. Bah s, her guardian. Bales is the guardian of William ' Leon Trout and Alta Trout Meeks, heirs of Oscar E. Trout. A number of objections were filed against the guardian; one asking for intere-t ■ amounting to $548.36; and another fur labor amounting to $304.06. The complaint states that the guardian also fil«-d to file an inventory I of the estate after he took charge. It also contends that while the plaintiff was in his home she worked for her* board, lodging, and clothing.
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The Greencastle Gas and Electric Co., is driving n new Ford truck delivered by King Morison and Poster.'
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Rupt. W. J. Yount, Supt. A. I). Mont gomery of Crawfordsville and Supt. C. P. Keller of Brazil were in Ricknell Thursday where they attended a! meeting of the Southern Indiana He-'
Kauble & Son “WE SELL MEAT THAT’S GOOD TO EAT
PORK CHOPS, lb. 2 POT ROAST, BEEF 1 "--- & BEEF BRAINS LB. i SMOKED SAUSAGE '"^'LB. LIVER WURST 2 LBS. SIDE BACON = .... LBDressed Chix, Veal, LaflL
