The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 April 1929 — Page 2
DO YOUR FEET SWELL AND BURN THIS TIME OF YEAR?
Almost everyone has foot troubles during this time of year but never know what to do for them. 75% of burning feet—stiff knees and sore muscles or corns are caused from metarsal (ball of the foot) trouble. We are equipped to correct this and gaurantee comfort. A few minutes in our store will mean several months of comfort.
MFTARSAL PADS
50c
FOR EACH PAIR OF SHOES
POTTER SHOE STORE
THE DAILY BANNER Entered in the Pont Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as second class nail matter. Under the act of March 3. ! 187*. Subscription price, 10 cents per week.
Personal And
Local
Phone All Social Iteme To 95.
Mrs. Donner Spraks At j Parke County Federation
116WS ^ rs ' ^ ,ran * c Dinner, of Greencastle,
j chairman of the 6th District of the
■ ■. i ■ » Indiana Federation of Clubs, spoke on Earl Arnold was a business visitor "Federation Work" at a meeting? of i in Cloverdale, Wednesday. j the County Federation of Wo-
' men’s Clubs which was held Wednes-
; Mrs. Fred Weaver of Brazil visited I day j,, Bellmore. ! in Greencastle, Wednesday. 4.
f rotn Lunc|ieon Kpr Mrs. O'Hair
i And 17th Anniversary
The Modern Pi i -cilla Club eelebrat-
| Thursday Reading Club To Hold Annual Party The annual meeting of the Thursday Reading Club will he held with Mrs. Howard Dean, <><)2 East Washington street, Thursday evening at 6:30 o’clock. Members are asked to bring table service.
+ ❖•i- 4- d-4
“Africa In One Generation"
Ip Missionary Topic
The regular meeting of the Wo-
ed its twenty-seventy anniversary man * 8 Missionary Society of the First Monday by giving a luncheon in hon-1 Christian Church was held Tuesday or of Mrs. Blanche Goodwins O’Hair,! evening at the Church. Mrs. Ralph the only living charter member, at j West, second vice-president of the the home of Mrs. Charles Broadstreet. 1 Society presided at the meeting. Mrs. The home was beautifully decorated ! |,| a p‘ 0 || orn had charge of the devour the occasion, with roses and j t jonal service. Mary Louise Talbott jonquils. | ^ ave a reading as a representative of
Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Reeves were; A cake, on which were twenty-sev-, t h e Triangle Girls, and Harriett Hea- | business visitors in Indianapolis, Wed-;'' 1 ' li kbted candles occupied the center ne y g ave a reading as a representa-
of the dining room table. Jonquils 1 t j V( . f rom the King’s Builders,
in hud vases, formed center pieces for
the small table- on which the lunch- main paper of the evening was eon was served to twenty-one mem- ffiven by Mrs. (lara Miller, the suhbers of the club and four guests. I j p ct being “Africa in One
D. V. Etcheson was here Hainbridge today on business.
Herman Linn, Roachdale, was a vis- , itor in Greencastle on Wednesday. I Mrs. Janies Harold of Roachdale I visited Wednesday in Greencastle. Albert Langdon of Indianapolis was ’ a business visitor in Greencastle,
i Tuesday.
1 nesday.
Goldie Kennedy of Cloverdale was ,in Greencastle on business Wednesday
J morning.
Harry French of Plainfield was a business visitor in Greencastle, Wed-
nesday.
Miss Faina Douglas of Brazil visited Tuesday in Greencastle with
friends.
NEW
WASH FROCKS Beautiful styles; „„ are co P1 e S of higher pi'
ed models.
Sleeveless frocks u* organdy belt and HaH? skirts. Also new *5* Ime styles with self oi l gamly trimmings. quality prints, fasteolj 14 to 20—36 to 51. 1 The Quality SB
J. H. Pitchford
op
Woman’s Study Club To Meet Thursday
The Woman’s Study Club will meet Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock with Mrs. Lie Dodge, 201 south Vine street. Mrs. Blackwell will have Genera- charge of the program.
Later in the afternoon the follow-, tmn”. Mrs. Miller told in a very ining program Was given: tcresting way of the size and popu“What the Club Has Meant to Me,”; lation of Africa and of the wonderful by Mrs. O’Hair. missionary opportunities which are Response, Mrs. McWethy. ! there. She told of the origin of the “Who is Who in the Priscilla BHK ian Cmi K°< ‘Im section of Africa
hostess to the Art and Nwu , and New Era Club as inv,,^ Tuesday afternoon. It a n group of women that gather» hospitable home with Faster 1,1* spring flowers and the lovely . r reminding one of the gloria
time.
Experiences were told by u, men present, which added nmi
The Missionary Society of the Rap- j the merriment of the occa.-ion.
++++++
Mrs. Mitchell President Of Missionary Soci-tv
Club?’’ Mrs. Kenneth Peck. “Then and Now,” by Mrs.
John
The official board of the Christian, Cannon
Church will meet Thursday evening ' ...... 1 ^ u Are\We Maintaining the Priscil a
at 7:30 o’c ock at the church.
TO HOLD MEETING
The second meeting of the leaders of the third year natrition work being held here in connection with the extension department of Purdue University, will be held next Friday morning, according to an announcement of County Agent Robert H. Stevenson. The meeting will lie held in the vocational building of the high school and will stait at 9:30 o’clock in the morning. All leaders are urged to atteul in order to carry on their work throughout the county. Miss Aneta Beedle, of Purdue University, will have charge of the meeting Friday. Dinner will lie prepared and -erved along with the third year nutrition work.
INDIAN AIM>DIS LIVESTOCK INDIANAPOLIS, April .3 (UP)— The hog market was steady at the Union Stock Yards here today. Bulk 160-300 pounders sold for $11.85 to $11.95, mostly at $11.90. Receipts were estimated at 8,00o. Cattle and calves receipts numbered 1,000 and MOO, respective!. The market was generally steady. Steerbrought $12 to $13.75, vealers were quoted at $14.50 to $15.50 and calves cleared at $7.50 to $12. The sheep market was steady.
Dr. Eckhardt will give his last philosophy lecture in Middle College,
this evening at 7:30 o’clock.
Mrs.
mie, Mrs. Andrew Turner and Ilene Brown spent Easter in Pana, Illinois. Professor and Mrs. W. Vernon Lytle
Standards?” by Mrs. Heber Ellis. Presentation of Easter Lily plant to Mrs. O’Hair, by Mrs. Susie Bittles. Mrs. Broadstreet responded to roll ^all by reading a humorous letter in
Lester Conrad and son Jim- verse f ornl) which she had received
from Mrs. Peter Stoner, a former member of the dub, now residing Jn
Pendleton, 1ml.
land family returned yesterday from | + + + + + + 1st. Louis where they spent the Easter I Boston ( luh vacation. Elects Officers
I Officers tor the ensuing year were
Asa Smith, who has been serious ^ elected during the meeting of the Bos-
where the missionary work of the Christian Church is being carried on
tist Church met Tuesday afternoon at 2 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Gassaway. Mrs. L. E. Mitchell lead the devotions. The progrhm for
today. Missionary work in Africa was the afternoon was carried out in the first contemplated by the Christian firm of 1 Flowers, with Mts. Mitchell Church, Mrs. Miller said, in 1884. But us leader. During the business session, it was not until 1897 that the first reports and communications were
missionaries were sent. In 1899 a j read.
mission station which was disbanded , Election of officers to servo for the by the Baptists was purchased and | ensu * n K y eal were made as follows:
PLEADS NOT GUILTY
Herbert Wilcox, wanted for wife <i« ertion, was returned to Greencastle 1 n Tuesday in custody of Alva Bryan deputy -heriff, who went to Chicago fcftor him. Wilcox was arraigned before Judge Hughes on Wednesday afternoon and • nt red a plea of not guilty. He was returned to jail after his bond was fixed at $500.
DEPAl’W SENIOR HONORED M. K. Krahl, Cambridge City, a sen- | ior at DePauw university, has been selected as the first Indiana man to get the Eli Lilly and Company fellow- ( ship at Johns Hopkins university for ! the study of chemistry. The fellowship gives the student $1,000 annually . for four years. Krahl was selected from a li-t of forty applicants by a committee maiie ! up of Harley W. Rhmlehumel, of Eli Lilly and Company; Frank B. Wade, head of the chemistry department of 1 Short ridge high school; and Dr. W. M. Blanchard, head of the chemistry department at DePauw university. Kiahl is a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity and Phi Beta Kappa, j national scholastic fraternity.
^ CHRYSLER MOTORS PRODUCT Vly mouth has the stamp of F/W Quality — not the look of LflZC? ¥ric€
"VrOU can be proud toi | m iln addition to its fuil1 own a Plymouth, the) ( nxt body, chaMM, engine
Chrysler Motor* car in
w........ ^ /and aale*-Plymouth the lowest-priced held :( ) | ,v,iyou the «uycontrol
— proud, became the
Plymouth ti \ full-\ru car, not a miniature — a comfortable car in which you and your family and friend* can relax to the fullest, instead of feeling
crowded and cramped;
—proud, became Plymouth it to typically Chryticr in performance—to swift m iraBii, 10 eager on hill*, to competent. Plymouth i* full-iitt and full-quality in every particular.
and the protection of (’hrytler/a//-<i*/ weatherproof internal-expanding four-wheel hydraulic brakes. Ior reaaont of both pride and purer, Plymouth i«today’* ftnrit mvettment in the held of lowrtt-prirrd motor ran. ( tuft, S635j KtuJjifr (<uiM rumbit it*!),$(>'5 \ ! UmrSf4su,tt7Ji T»uriug,9M>3i UfLuxt ( tufttixiiJk rumb/f IfUt), SfiWj 4 l)„r bfd»», ftM. AHfnmf.t.k. fMtrj. Plymtulh dernier j art in a ftnlim it eaten J Me reel ve/eei etfli mefaynuntt.
ill at his home on N. Madison St., for several days remains in a critical
condition.
Mrs. Laura and Jerome Hixon, 114 Northwood Rlvd., have purchased a new two door Buick sedan from Moffett and Dobbs. The regular monthly meeting of the Official Bonn) of the Methodist Church will he held tonight at 7:30 at the Church. Mi-s Lucille Allan has returned from Chicago where she was the guest of Miss Marie Steiback during the Easter holidays. Mary E. Job was committed to the Evansville State Hospital Wednesday in the Putnam Circuit court by Judge James P. Hughes. Mr. and Mrs. George Reising and daughter, Mary June, spent Easter Sunday with the tatters parents Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Knoll of near Clover-
' dale.
Mrs. Alice Hendricks, of Indianapolis, and formerly a resident of Jackson township, was in Greencastle for a few hours Wednesday morning on business. D. R. Graybill, assistant manager of the J. C. Penney store here, will go to St Louis tomorrow to attend a meeting of store manager- of this <li*t rict. A bench warrant was issued to the sheriff of this county for the arrest of Thomas J MCoy on a charge of issuing fraudulent checks. The original affidavit was filed about two years
ago.
The Cloverdale Methodist Sunday School Easter program was attended by 195 persons Sunday morning. The altar of the Church was beautifully decorated with Easter flowers and ferns. The program was well given by the different classes of the school. Prof. E. P. Lowery presided over the
devotional exercises.
Superintendent Warren J. Yount announced Wednesday morning that the annual exhibit of the manual training, art, and domestic science departmentwill be held in the high school building during the week of May th. The annual exhibition of the boys and girls physical training classes will be held in the gymnasium on the night of
Friday, May 17.
ELTMOOTm AM km:AS LOWEST me ED FILL SIZE CAR 0. J. RECTOR SALES
3 E. Franklin St.
Greencaatle, Ind.
ton Club at the home of Mrs. Eugene Light, east Seminary street, on Tuesday evening. The new officers are: President—Mrs. E. R. Bartlett. 1st Vice-President—Mrs. E. B. Tay-
lor.
2nd. Vice-President— Miss Kate Ix>vett. • Recording Secretary—Miss Effie Stiegleman. Corresponding Secretary— Miss .Mildred Rutledge. Treasurer—Miss Jennie Throop. Council Member—Mrs. Louis H. I
Dirks.
Flower Committee— Miss Etta Adams, Mrs. Belle Carver. Program Committee—Mrs. Frank N. Jones, Mrs. C. K. Hughes, Miss i Eva Milburn. Letters from former members, now residing in Ohio, California and other states were read. Miss Pearl O’Hair and Mrs. John Young conducted a very interesting discussion on “Art in The Home,” which was greatly enjoyed by the members. The next meeting of the Boston Club will he held Tuesday, April 9th with Mr.-. Charles F. Zeis, 305 east Washington street. Indorsers To Meet In Indianapolis The 15th annual meeting of the Indiana Indorsers of Photoplays will he held Thursday and Friday at the Claypool Hotel in Indianapolis. The meeting will open Thursday morning at 9:30 o’clock with a business session. Thursday evening at 7:30 a number of educational films will be shown. Mrs. McCullough, Secretary of the Film Hoard of Trade of Kun«as City will speak on “The Type of Picture which may be secured for Churches, Schools and Institutions,” Mr. Norman of Indiana University will talk on “The Value to the State of a University Film Library.” A section of “The Indiana Historical Film,” collected by H. H. Cobum will also be shown. Friday morning a program as follows will be given: “What a Group of Indorsers mean to a Community,” Mr*. Bertrand. “Children’s Matiness," R. G. Hend*
ding.
“What the Fan Clubs Hope to Accomplish,” Mrs. Sims, Pres, of Richard Dix Club. “Why Does Censorship Fail to Get Good Pictures,” Mrs. G. T. Landis. • “Pictures of Correctional Schools,” Supt. of Girls’ School, Clermont. “Discussion of Pictures,” Mrs. Fenl Lucas, Mrs. Whipple, Mrs. Demares of Franklin. Luncheon—Riley Room. Address—By Miss Elizabeth Perkins, New York City. Address—Bv Terry Ramsaye, New York City. Discussion—Walter Hickman (Times), Boyles (Star), and Nichols
(News).
7:30—Film, “Moulin Rouge,” court-
esy of Film Board.
Mrs. Ferd Lucas of Greencastle, who holds one of the offices of the
SUBSCRIBE FOB “THE BANNER’’ Indorsers will attend the sesaions,
the work began in earnest. The w’ork has had a phenomena! growth since that time. In 1905 there was but one Church with a membership of 91. In 1925 there were six stations, 50 missionaries, 774 native workers, 32 organized churches, 841 regular places of meeting, with a total membership of almost 15,000. During the year 1925 there were 2,834 baptisms. Since 1925 the work has grown to such proportions that it »is hard to supply the workers and supplies necessary.
Following the program refreshments were served to the members and their guests in the newly decor-
ated dining room of the Church. This Mrs. Snider Is was the second open meeting which Charming Hostess the Society has held during this year. Mrs. L. D. Snider was the charming
Mrs. L. Ft. Mitchell, Pres. Mrs. Donald Davidson, Vice. Mrs. Raymond O’Neal, Sec. Mrs. Charles Ewan, Treas. Mrs. S. E. Davies, Lit. Sec.
Twenty-one members were present and every one enjoyed the social hour during which the hostess served re-
freshments.
To Give Shower
F’or Daughter
Mrs. Etta Hall will entertain at her home on N. College Ave., Friday evening with a shower, in honor of her daughter, Mrs. Andrew Trout, who was formerly Miss Flthel Hall.
+ -F + + + +
Krehl, Mrs. Lee Reeves and Hn M. Arnold assisted the hust^ servinl delicious refnshmen™
++++*+
Easter Surprise At Mt. Meridian Mr. and Mrs. Alfred H. Sm, Mt. Meridian and Mrs. W. S.' and son Maynard of near Gr tie took Faster dinner with Jr, Mrs. J. Joseph McWilliams of napolis. Where the surprisen Mr. and Mrs. Harden Mundy,l|r, Mrs. Lee Stone and Mrs. Peirlt es of Muncie, all had rrtaiiurr ments to he- there not kmaring the Greencastle folks vveret it was a very happy day forul had been a year since theywr gether and the dinner was St
king.
+ + + -M- + Entertain At Easter Dinner Mr. ami Mrs. W. S. I.awter family of Morton had as their Easter Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Maddox and daughter . Min Gloe Thomas of Greencastle; Mrs. Lon Ramiro and dauzhter (Continued on page 41
JUST ARRIVED Five of the Season’s Best
The Tiro At $7.50
START CASE IN COURT
The case of Daisy Hofmeister versus Elmer *Blue sturtenl in the Circuit court Wednesday afternoon before Judge James P. Hughes. The early part of the afternoon was spent in examining the jury by the attorneys.
The suit is for damages.
Hays ami Murphy and Charles McGaughey are the attorneys for the plaintiff, and Corwin and Gillen, Glen H. Lyon, John H. James and Judge
Rawley for the defendant.
A dull kid strap model with dressy cuban heel. A tailored shoe for street or dress, with built in arch.
The Jacquin At $7.50
DRESS
AND STREET Shoes
The Super At $7.50
yw r *r y
The Radiant
At $8J
R/tcxAxr
An open shank on strap model in patent. A deck! different dress sn
The Dorabel At $8.00 IL
Am jutwxttN |
A charming pump in patent and crepe satin
A beautiful strap pattern in black patent.
A dull kid (don pump with new o French beaded buck! A very striking" 100
Other New Styles From $5.00 Up. MOORE & COOK
