The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 March 1929 — Page 4

,TiiU UKEl^iJNUASTljiij UAIIjY UANiNH/lt »A1UKL»AI, iviruvv^ —»

SILK HOSIERY

FOR EASTER

Finest ({uality At Lowest Prices. PL’RF TIIKKAI) SILK HOSK, all

eolors, :-li«htly irregular

of $1.00 hose, pr U«/l/

FULL FASHION SILK pure silk, all colors, pair

HOSK, 98c

CHIFFON HOSK, full fashion, .-ilk from toe to top. Onyx, (1J'| OF Pair ’P- 1 •* lt ' • FULL FA: HION HOSK, silk from toe to top, service (I*'I QQ w< ight, p nted heels, pi *PA»0«/ CHIFFON HOSK, pure silk from top to too, full fashion, (I*'| OQ all color . pr iPl.Oi/

M CALM M. KAVSKR, and GOLD STRIPK SI I K HOSK, both chiffon

and service weight ....

phrase and a difference as to the color of the hair and eyes. The most striking version appears in "PalesI tine and The World,” by Frank G.

Jannaway. It reads:

“There has appeared a man here, in Palestine, who is still living, whose power is extraordinary. He has the title of the great prophet; his discipII les call him the son of God. He rais- ; es the dead, and heals all sorts of diseases. He is a tall, well-propor-tioned man; there is an air of sen ility in his countenance, which at once attracts the love and reverence of

those who see him.

“His hair is the color of new wine; from the roots to his ears; and from thence to his shoulders, it is curled, and falls down to the lowest part of them. Upon the forehead it parts in two, after the manner of the Nazar-

cnes. .

“His forehead is flat and fair, his face without any defect, and - adorned with a graceful vermilion, his air is J | majestic and agreeable, his nose and Si his mouth are very well proportioned, 2 i and his beard is thick and forked, of J the colour of his hair; his eyes are

Si grey and extremely lively. y i “I.. n>i i iw n i In* i-

HER Easter Treat

A box of delicious candy appropriately packed for the occa- | sion. HAMILTON’S BOOK STORE

$1.85

Greene county authorities, when

S. C. PREVO COMPANY

In his reproofs he is terrible, hut

4 | in his exhortations and instruction- iiuestioned, explained that they would . Zi amiable and courteous; there is some- have paroled tin girl except for the £ thing wonderfully charming in hi- fact that “there is not a chance to ap- | ♦ face with a mi ture of gravity, lie peal to the public opinion or the peo-

^ is never seen to laugh, hut he ha pie < f the town.’’ been observed to weep. - —u

“He is very straight in stature; his iff VITHMl'l KM OKI) FLIGHT I ♦ hands arc large and preading, and KANGKK, Tex., Mar. UP. <LT)—

4 X i his arms very beautiful. H talks lit- An attempt to better the refueling

tie, but with great gravity, and is the endurance flight record set by the'

~ ~ - ■■ — handsoine-t man in the world.” Amy plane "Question Mark”, will who went about the city, followed by * n p* 101- v ' ,| ' slon -' i *he letter the take Owen I. ilaugland, .’17-year-old disciphs who called him the Son of ^ la ' 1 ' s “escribed a the cob r <d a Ranger pilot, and a companion to the God, and forwarded an official report hazel-nut when ripe, and the color north, south, east and west borders

to the authorities at Rome.

EASTER PROGRAMS AT THE THKATEIi

VONCASTLEI | Cranad

T 0 I) A Y

2 TO 11 l\ M.

10c-25c

BKN LYON AND ANTONIO mokkno In the 1 . S. Air Mail Kpic

'bOiX

AUDKD CO.MKDY and Tarzan SKIM A L

SOMK SHOW: YOU’LL LIKK THIS ONK

SUNDAY AND MONDAY

JOHN

GIIBERT

Home Store.

FKTURF «»| CHRIST

(Copyright,. I P2P, by United I’ress) WASHINGTON, March :!«. (UP)— Only one suppe edly conti'mporary pen-picture of Je.-us Chri-t has been preserved for the modern w rid. Itauthenticity i. in <|ucstion hut it has existed for so many centuries that it

The letter i- known to have been “greyish-blue.”

in existence in the eleventh century at which time it appeared in the

of a walnut when mature.” The eye-, () f t h,.. United States with Wichita,' are variously described as “blue” and Kas., as the pivotal -ooint.

The marathon liight will be made

with KKNKST TOKK KNCK, M \m NOLAN

A

WILLI VM MC.H production

/

’f

is largely n pon.-ihle for the conven- ' vnti " K of Sl - AM 'elm archbishop of tional picture of Chri t which famou.- ( ' at,,|bur - v - Some «h(dars have held artists have drawn. th '' , ‘' tt, r 11 fl, '’gery and deny that

such a man a> Lentulus ever lived.

I his pen-sketch of (hii-t purports Nevcrthele-- the ih’scription has shapto have been written by one Publius ed th. mental picture of Christ for Lentulus, po.--ibly a miiiei Roman of- the world. ficial in Jerusalem, alleged to have Thi- alleged letter of Lentulus has been a friend of Pontius Pilate. Len- been found in four languages, all sjrntulus took note of the strange man iliar except for slight variation tf

I'MI i; PIE IN AIRPLANE CRASH

Bond Thieves Under Arrest

HOLLYWOOD, March MO. (UP) — Carl Coleman, 25, and Morris Gt adman, 2M, former property men at the Paramount studios, were in jail today and a third man was being sought on the charge of stealing bonds valued at $150,000 from Wallace Beery, film actor. Goodman and Coleman were arrested when they tried to dispose of the bends to a brokerage firm. Police said both confessed. Beery’s portable dressing room on the movie lot was robbed last April

in a Cessna monoplane equipped with \ an Axelson motor of 150 horse-power. | The wing tank capacity will be 80^ gallons and a 100-gallon tank within! the fuselage will be used as a stor- j age tank for gasoline taken in the mid-air refuelings. Another Cessna monoplane pulled! by a Wright Whirlwind motor of 220 horsepower, will boused to refuel the liight plane. It present tank capac-1 ity of 80 gallons will he increased to 150 gallons. This plane was pur- i chased some months ago by Haugiand i with the intention of entering the 1 New York to I.os Angeles trims-1 continental liight but the manufac-i turers failed to complete the ship in

time.

The endurance attempt will he started at the Ranger municipal airport some time after April 12. The

Nights of love—nights of mystery and thrill under (tic African

moon!

Don’t miss the Prince of Romance in his newest hit! To " I he Big Parade”, “Love,” “A Woman of Affairs,” “Masks of the Devil" and the other Gilbert triumphs, now add this thrilling romance of the burning \friean sands! It’s a ‘onsation! ADDED COMKDY AND MAYS

.a

tonight Final Showing HL1V K Hoit|)|'\ And HUNTLKY G()U[h )N In “Sinners In Love"

ADDED COM!,)\

AM) St | \ |i

7 AND !) P. M._

bic-'ivl

SUN.-MON. 7 AND 9 P. M THE

IOc-3,

iPP

***** w

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A

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A Startlini; Nyw Shn» " ith Mighty Ihiac:

^-71

. -

uVS'* MARION NIXON WILLIAM COLLIER jr CARMEL MYERS

Maming romance of old lb;-n COMEDY NEWS

THE WELL-DKKSSFD FIREMAN

300- partment while i ff duly. Ttw

I 5, and the stolen securities were bur-

| led in a vacant lot where according J first hop will he to Wichita, Kans., j to the men under arrest, they re- where a swing to the West will take mained for almost a year. Haugiand to Los Angeles. From

there he will retrace his course back

PLEAD FOR BUREAU

INDIANAPOLIS, Mar. 30 (UP)—

to the revolving point and refuel. The next Jump will bo to Columbus,

Wrecks-e of Columbus, O.-N.w Ymk plane which crashed in a fog into a tne on South nvo'iitain between <'ehlirook and Mount Gretna, Pa., killing pilot, John I.. Campion, .T'2, and thro, pas-engeis. Campion nee acted

as (lying in-tructor for Fred Stone, Hying stage comedian.

Much indignation ha- been aroused i Ohio, for a second refueling; thence here over the sentencing of Daisy -New York and back to Columbus ! Sullivan, 18, Bloomfield, Ind., to 2 tii for another refur-ling. From Colum14 years at th- Indiana Woman’s bus he will again return to Wichita prison for forgery of a $2.80 check. ! -'“'I start flying southward to the Rio Daisy, who had lost her job at a Grande. Kn route he will take restaurant several days ago, forged t8e gasoline at Hanger. Continuing to name of her former employer to the Hrown-ville, lex., he will circle hack check. With 20 cent- of the money :'o longer for more gasoline and then she bought some oranges and bananas point his ship n< rthward to the pivand was eating them in a courthouse otal point and the Canadian border. ! restroom when arrested. She pleaded 1 After touching the last of the four guilty at her trial, explaining that , national border*. Haugiand will head she was “very hungry” and 18 hours j hack south for Wichita and remain | after the crime, was sentenced. in the air as long as the motor lasts. Residents of Indianapolis, where The east-west flight, Haugiand tigthe girl was brought for imprisonment ur* ■> "ill consume IK) hours and the ; were planning today to appeal to Gov. | north-south trip, 10. The remaining Hairy G. Leslie for Miss Sullivan’s! hours necessary to set a record will i pardon. It was pointed out that Jess- I be pent over the pivotal point. To j up Bolinger, Shtlburn, Ind., Banker, j better the Question Mark record recently convicted for admitted forg- Haugiand must remnin aloft 51 hours ery of $150,00(1 in notes, was given ' and 30 minutes after completing his the same sentence as that of Miss journeys east to we.-t and north to

Sullivan. ( south.

accordin'.', to Jack Alexander,

o—— . pound fireman. Three times when Jack emergency calls miuih!mI urn! WINFIELD, Kan., Mar. 30 (UP)— bought a new pair of dress shoes, he answering th alarm, r: -t 1 Dres- shoe- and fire, don’t mix well appeared with them at the fire de-: shoes. Radio anddircraftlnroMe for RedCiwsItisasterReM

f. ' i

Wi

F£-v^-,

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WHERE LINDBERGH AND ANNE MORROW MAY WED IN JUNE CEREMONV

Airplanes, enrolled by Bed Cross for disaster relief, carry lirst aid bits Pi the injured and search nut isolated communities.

w

Wedding of Colond Charles A. Lindbergh and Miss Anne Morrow is to take place in June at the Morrow's Deacon Brown Point estate on North Haven island in Penobscott Bay, Maine, according to latest reports. Above, right, is a view of the estate. At left is Caretaker Hubert O. Grant, now in charge. Lower left is the only entrance to the island, showing point whero Lindbergh and bride-to-be would ‘ land..' Lower right, Caretaker Grant snaoped getting the Morrow parlor into shao-}.

IND storms—cyclones, torna-

does and hurricanes—are the most disastrous aud

I prevalent type of calamity In the United States, according to statistics I Just compiled by the American Bed Cross at Washington, In preparation ' for launching the major objective of ' its 1929 program, a plan for strengthi ening measures to prepare for relief.

1 should disaster come,

A revised edition of the manual “When Disaster Strikes,” which sets i forth the plan for organization for disaster relief, hus just been turned to Red Cross Chapters and branches In i ten thousand coiniminltles by nation.t'.| headquarters. It stresses the necesi slty for strengthening committee* and plans for meeting emergency relict, j and for surveys of all hazards in the community, such as rivers and lakes subject to overflow, mines, munition

1 factories, etc.

In listing the 938 disasters in the United States and Us possessions In which the society lias given relief since its organization under the International treaty signed In 1882 by President Arthur, the Red Cross gives the three groups of calamities appearI tng most frequently, ns follows; cyclones, tornadoi s, hurricanes and j other storms, 231; tires, 131; floods,

I 126.

Hlnee the Red Cross responded In I 1882 to the first appeal made to It for j disaster relief, to mitigate the plight of pioneering farmers and villagers driven from their homes by forest j fires in the North Central slates,

A balanced diet, nrr.iiiK.'d In Ib-'l • '’"‘'V 1 personnel and uiitriliuuists, resluivs TH'’ , health, Fine hurricane.

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tu

Riv-

al;] the

VtCtL

A modern bimpitul, built

by lii-il Cross to replace fui-llities destroyed by West Indies hurricane In

l‘°rto Kiro, Is base for tight against epidemics.

•methods of communication and trans- Mississippi Valley flood (lf ' portatlou have materially changed, of more than $17,OO"."* 1 " “ ' ad

The cry for help comes now on the radio; assistance is rushed by air plane, train, motor car or fast water ‘■ran; communication Is established by Hie wireless; Isolated spots can be searched out from the sky by the airplane, ami health can he preserved by medical science's discoveries In vacci-

nation, inoculation and diet.

The (list great disaster in which the Red Cross gave relief was the Johnstown, Pa., flood, and Hie second was tho Hun Francisco earthquake. The disaster causing the most widespread distress ami material loss, although

the loss of life was not great, was the Government.

by the Red Cross to

of that flood.

In the 48 years of U* -> American Red Cro.-s •' p $77,354,(100 in disaster r<'"'^ jf Its charter from • , s gated to give relief In *<•*“ 't cause the ('resident o States Is President <u and five of the I ments are represent!'1 04]

or •aalsUints up

mlttee, the Red t'i"' s j 1 " ’ . ( i mental agency fci reli' ^ utmost co-oik ration 11 jal