The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 May 1929 — Page 3
4
4) t t t tMttt44 decoration day specials WEDNESDAY AM) THURSDAY. Carnations 75c per doz. Roses 75c to $3.80 per. doz. CASH Blooming Geraniums 20c each We close at noon Thursday EITEL FLORAL COMPANY Phone 63(i
CLASSIFIED; ADS
—Lost— I.OST—Keys in leather container. ! Owner’s name on tap\ Leave at Ban-
—For Sale—
LOTS of fancy peonies for Decoration Day. Phones 82. Wetz the ciocer. 27-3t.
ncr office.
2D-It
—Miscellaneous—
PEONIES for Decoration Day.
o Phones RD.-Wetz nl o sells eats. 27-3t FOR SAI.PiBoiniiiet-- of I" ful flowers, 50c each. Mrs. T. R LOTS of fancy p. onies for DecoraChristie, 210 N'. College. Phone 2ls. tion Day. Phones 82. Wetz the ttrn-20-lt. cer. 27-3t.
FOR SALE (iood used men u t- FLOWERS—Lot n;Cut flower- for and shoes. John Tharp, Olive tivrt, Decoration Day ami later. Mrs T VV. Barber shop. 28-2p. i Wright, North Rond 43. ip
NOTICE All delinquent dog taxes in Jcffirson township must be paid to the trustee before June 2. Lawtence \lcCnmmack.
FOR SALE:—Beautiful pink and X white Pennies. 50c and 75c i , r /i n. Mrs. Win. Welch. 411 W Jacob St. 2S-lt. I PEONIES for Decoration Day. j Phones 82. Wetz also sell: eat , 27-3t '
M1XRALITE Elastic and durable, stops roof leaks. Ben Kennedy, 113 i Elizabeth St., Greencaatle.
FOR SALE:—Dahlias and Penn,. and iiis. 4o7 \V. Jacob Street .'a-Jt
Kil l.MORE or Anna Gould of New York, refused Mis. Curtis Hughes and daughter to let him marry the giil he loved i at cia spent Saturday with Mi Ed- because he was too young. Howard fin Steward. would have been 2o in July. H R. Piuitt, wife and son, Richard o ^re in Greenfield, Sunday. ALL OVER INDIANA Mrs. Lota Perkins and children, DYER — Ross Erwin, 9, is hack in L ied friend- in Bainbridge, Satin- ( school after submitting to a delicate ty night and Sunday. 1 operation for the removal of a whistle |Mrs. R. J- Overstreet, Misses Rose from hi- left lung. The boy .-wallow|ui Harriet Jo hn of Greencastle vis- ed the whistle, one of the type requirIfu Mrs. Emma Ragan Saturday aft- ing an intake of breath to sound. Only jnoon. Mrs. Kagan’s condition i- ini- ( a light anesthetic was used on the Lvcd. boy and the whistle taken out by [Mis. H. R. Pruitt and Mrs. Wm. i tneans of forceps inserted directely tu attended the Rehekah A emhly 1 the lung through the throat. •
h;ch was held at Indiunapoli:
last
TALLEY RANI) DIES
—o—
GREENFIELD — Sheriff John Nigh and Police Chief John MulviJ hill made certain that a band of gyp- ' sirs traveling in eight automobiles
PARIS, May 2d. (Cl )—Howard de j who camped overnight three miles jlleyiand, son of the Duke and east of here, would not leave with Uihess de Talleyrami, <lied at a any property belonging to farmers in til ate hospital today from a self- lho vicinity. The officer- took keys [Dieted bullet wound. 1 to all the cars and'did not return them i tie young man shot himself two next morning until a thorough search tek- ago when his mother, the form- revealed no stolen property.
FREQUENT CLEANING NECESSARY Clothing wears away from grease, stain and dirt. There isn’t any -ult but what these’ll hurt. And frequent cleanings are very much forth while, For reasons other than keeping with style. So, of your suit needs cleaning its life to prolong, We’d better have it now. Don't wait too long. IDEAL CLEANERS Telephone 470, Call & Deliver,
Prices Cut To The Limit!!! After June first, we will sell chicks at the extremely low price of $10.00 per hundred. We will continue to produce the same high quality, bred-to-lay chicks which have given such hign satisfaction for the past five years. Only a few chick available, so phone or write your order NOW.
Attractive reductions on poultry supplies and Sargent paint's. Stock up at these HHJ SAVINGS.
quality
GREENCASTLE HATCHERY Phones 525-L, ..303-1.. 22 S. Jackson St.
CHRYSLRR MOTORS PRODUCT
LYMOUTH
\sjoks Quality -j\c?S Quality
— \s Quality ^ '“pmae lie people to power—its amazing pick-up, / * whom Plymouth’s big its unflagging stamina, its attraction is its Chrysler- delightful smoothness and ^ J * flexibility at all speeds.
designed smartness.
Some people buy the fu/Jou Plymouth largely because t is the largest and roomiest
to be had at anywhere near its price. To other people, *• main reason for Sating Plymouth is mouth's impressive
*655 •agaHMrgi
/*■»■/<
Still other people choose
Plymouth primarily because it is so safe to drive, with its
perfect balance and stability, and the easy, positive control of its Chrysler weatherproof internal- expanding 4wheelbydraulw brakes.
had» ityies, priud frrm $655 to $605. All prutt /■ t. hi &clwy. P/yiruuli dtalrrt ixUnd the itrivenuntt tf time penneutu v IPLTMDTMI aulSICA S UIWIIT-SS1CIU rULL »U» CAS
A i 1
0. J. RECTOR SALES 5 E. Franklin St. Greencastle, Ind.
FOR SALE Peonies, 50c tier doz. 1 Phone 287-K, L,ei> F. Cox, Eliz.ihi ili | street. 2S-2p FOC SALS Mo 1 ’ toy aer<>plai e, practically new. Call U81-L. li)-l|i FOR SALE—1 Kaltex -wing, 2 K.iltex chairs, Kaltex se-ttec, ga i m • kitchen cabinet. Phone 39(1. 1007 S. Locust St. 2l)-2p.
FOR SALE Violin, good condition, also mandolin and guitar. Phom i:42-l. 29-tf
F’OK SALE- One Durcc male hog. J. J. Harrold, 1’hone Rural HWi. 29-211 o FOR SALE Geranium for Decoration Day. We will lie open all day Thursday. C. S. Butterfield, Phone 182-Y. 29-It. FOR SALK-—1920 Chevrolet coupe good condition practically new tires. | Priced right call Banner. 29-3p FOR SALK Totsenhui'.' milk goat giving good flow milk, with two doe kids, 4 months old. All in fine liape, at a bargain. Morton Foster, Clayton. 29-Ip. I For 8 \ I K Modi rn colt rooms and bath, hot water heat, ten minutes from square. Rea-onable. Cash or terms. L. E. Mitchell, <i42-L. 20-t f. FOR SALK:—-Lilies, lit and peonies 702 N. Madison. Phone S5Y. 28- 2t FOR SALE— Frying chicken . the very best. Allendale, Phone 487-Y. 29- 3t For S M E “Pridi of The North” 90 day seed corn. Germination test, 90 per cent; purety test 98 per cent. $2.00 per bushel, crib run. Plume Chris Knauer, Brick Chapel. 29-4p
FOR SALE .Strawberries. Special today. Drive out. Peterson Fruit Farm Phone Rural 88. 109 Martin ville St. (Fox Ridge). 29-tf FOR SALE: Flower- of all kinds. Telephone 181. Mrs. Zaring. 28-2t
FOR SALE - Strawberries. C. M. Ewing, Phone Rural .310. 28-51 For SAM'.; i ! net. Red Star Oil stove, good as new. Phone 522. 27-tf
F'OR SALE—Irh and peony blooms also mixed gladioli bulbs. T. J. Tuttle, 510 K. Seminary St. Phone 270-Y. 27-31.
FOR SALE— Thoroughbred Pointer puppies—For ale or trade: Violin, trombone—10(1 acre farm. Call 403 or 449-L. 21-tf. FOR SALE Kaltix living ioom suite, bed davenport and two rocking chairs, velour and tapestry, removable cushions. Also bedroom furniture. Mrs. L. K. Mitchell. 27-tf FOR SALE Cabbage plants, early and late. 10c dozen. 805 Crown street. Louis Hodshire. Ip. | (Rt 8 M l. 1 1 •> I tn elect diol 8 tube, walnut console model, practically new. $225, will sell for ! 1140. L. E. Mitchell 042-L. 27-tf —For Rent— FOR RF.NT—Four room furnished house, with garage. Good location. Call G81-L. 29-Ip F’OR RENT -0 room modern house by June 5th. Phone 795-K. 29-2p FOR RENT:—Light hou ekeeping) and sleeping rooms. Phone 235-L 212 W. Columbia St. 27-3p FOR RENT—Small office room in Voncastle Theater Building by June 1st. Heat furnished. Call 330 or , *52. 22-tf. —Wanted— WANTED:—2 baby calves. Phone I 531 Join M< Farluiw 27-31 WANTED Light truck hauling, ashes, cinders or cleaning out haseI ments. Phone 500-L. 28-34)1 I -o— WANTED:—We estimate oif all kinds of plastering, patching a -pecialty, Frazier and Furcell. Phone 084IL. 26-tf
^QNQUISr
BAJtO ON THE CANDLE inthC WIND
MARYtIMLAY.TAYLOR
•i
Copyright 1928, Warner Bros Pioturm* tnc. ’CONQUEST.” starring Monte Blue, Is a Warner Bros, plcturlzatlon of • this novel.
BYXOPSIB Arthur Faunce returns from an intarctir expedition on irhich Simon Overton, the leader imd ('ounce's friend, uos lost. Both Mem loved Diane Her for A, but nou 'Maurice proposes Tortured fll his memories, Fnutiec ron/esses to Dr. Jerrp that, panic-stricken in a bllz- ] tard, he deserted Overton, nut pet lead, and found rescue for himself Unknou iny, Diane marries Fannee. )nn day while Faunce In away ar■anging for a new expedition, Over.on returns Inadvertently he reveals his lore for Diane and tells ter part of the true story. Then Fiiunrr comes home and says that 'he expedition has been delayed for i time. Diane tells him of Overton s jlsit. « There was a sharp pause. Faunce met her gaze steadily f»r an Instant longer, like a man who had been suddenly *Jleved of a terrible suspense. “Yes, I hnow he’e come back I beard the details to-day; but 1 didn’t know he was hero. I suppose he came here to aee—you?" "He came up here to see ids old aunt,” sho replied with another effort. "I met him accidentally in the woods, and 1 A* une here to tea this afternoon. H-. left’ a nipsaugo for you. "Ho said he Wanted to you, and would wait-inttl you jams " Faunce scene .1 to consider this
The door opened and Overton entered. and weigh It carefully. Again she had a vague Impression that he was relieved. "If you’ll excuse nie, then, dear, I’ll go to see him," he said at last. Sl(e caught Iter breath quickly, a wild hope leaping up In her heart. Would Arthur be so ready to face Overton, so apparently eager to meet him, If he had been the one to forsake him? A feeling of Intense relief s'vept over her, and she sank back weakly In her chair. "He didn’t tell me much about that awful time when he so nearly perished,” she said slowly, choosing her WOI "but what he said —horrified me I can’t forget It!” Faunce ^raised his eyes reluetsntly to her l ice. and she saw a strange expression in them—an expression that hafllexl tier. "Hueh things aren’t easy to describe, Diane. IPs like anything else that’s terrible and awe-inspir-ing-it leaves one speechless. There’s something about the pojpr wastes that mokes a man’s soul numb and mute. I’ll go over at once. I may be late, for we shall have a good deal to say Don’t elt up for me—you look tired.” "I hope you won't be too late. You're so restless, Arthur, and yon sleep ao little I 1 don’t see how yon live.” "I think I shall sleep tonight.” Again his tone had In It the suggestion of relief that hgd reassured
her.
Faunce pursued his way along the road that led to Overton'* stop-ping-place with a steadiness that trould have amazed no one more than It amazed himself. He had come to the end of his rope; or. to change the analogy, the gams was played out, he had lost, and he must pay. In his own eyes be had become a thing so miserable and so dishonest that his dally life had been filled with exquisite torture. The love that had driven him on to make Diane Ms wife had, tn the end, been only a knife to cut deeper into his quivering flesh Rvery word of hers, every cares*, every evidence of her character, had only served to reveal the light tn whioh ■he would be sure to regard him If she knew the truth. If she did not know It now, she would know It tomorrow or the day after. It could not be long delayed; tho end was close at hand. As Faunce realized this, he drew X long breath. He was smsced to feel relief In spite of all It meant to him. his first feeling had been almost one of dlsslnaae. like a man from whom a weight has euifde
fallen, and who reels back light-hea-Jod and unable to adjust himself to tho change in bis equllllirkiin. If Overton lived. Faunce was no longer responsible fur his death No man could brand him with tho mark of Cain He was liberated from the thing that had hung upon him as fearfully as the slaughtered albatross once hung upon the neck of the Ancient Marines' Faunce climbed a sharp ascent, and, turning into a wider path, suddenly found himself before the bouse where Overton was visiting bis old relative. As lie ran* and stood waiting, his apathy suddenly left him Then tho dpor opened, and he found himself asking for Overton. The servant, a gaunt, pule-faced woman, evidently an old standby, led him down a long, narrow hall to a portion of the house which bad been added us unexpectedly and unreasonably as some perverse Imp might add an extra wtug to a chicken or a fifth leg to * cow. The woman, preceding Faunce, opened a door and asked him to sit down and wait in tho library while she Went to announce his arrival to Overton. He entered reluctant- ^ ly, aware of a brilliant light from the reading lamp on the low tabia In tho center, and looked about him, alad of a few moments’ added reprieve. On th* table, amid a Utter o| books and papers, an old pipe lay beside the open ink well. Near it, lying open, was tho book that Faunce himself had published, which contained the rescued sheets from Overton's diary and Faunce'g frenzied efforts to patch togetbeg the broken record, to force one and two to make four. Tho sight of It there, the »rvl denre that Overton must have been reading bis version of that fateful Journey, affected Faunce deeply He moved slowly to the table and looked down at the open page, aura before he saw It that It must ha the ope on which he had Inscrib'd his own story of Overton's deathhad lied, In black and whlto, to save hlmaelf from shame!
4 es j
He was not mletaken- it was the vary page, and a deep pencil mark accentuated the most damning paragraph He straightened him self with a sickening feeling ol shame, and drew back, trying to steady Idinsolf At tha? moment he heard a step outside in the hall, and Overton entered, shut the door behind him, and (stood looking at Faunce It seemed an Interminable moment to Faunce that they *1 4 thus, looking at eac h other Ha had tinie to note the terrible change and waste In Overton’s face—the face that had haunted him ao long with the veil of frozen mist upon it, fixed and unconscious tn Its awful tranquility. Now that ha saw it alive and hollowed with suffering, It gave him a strange feeling -or, rather, u confusion of feelings, In which relief was fot the moment upisirmost. Howuvor he had failed, however hi-had played tho craven, the man lived, ha had no death on his eottl' Hut his feellnc of relief was soureeded by swift and overwhelming humiliation, which increased when Overton amazed him by advancing calmly across the room and hold ing out a hand. “Well, Faunce, I'm glad you came although I suppose you had vary little wish to come!". Faunce colored deeply, his bund falling away from Overton’s with a growing: feeling of shame. "Ft was hard to come for 1 don't know what to say Indeed, therc-'g nothing for me to say. I know, of courso. what you think of me!" The other man put this aaigg with ft significant gesture of wearU
nesa.
"Let it go, Faunce—I’m tired c( it. For a while I believed I hated yon and reviled you In m* thoughts; but afterwerd. IdoVng hark at it, 1 couldn't blame a mu for wanting to live That was.
course, the sire of It.”
Fauuce, who had erpeoted r* proaches and condemnation, wag staggered by Overton’s attired* He could not fathom It. and he tried to face it with a shretvdneac and acumen that might cover hia oafe fusion and discover the othi-r >eoa%
motives.
“I don't believe ywg feci ifYe that!" he snld harahly. "Vmi can’U, I've oftna pictured it to nyeetL and felt that In your place I tf outj have cursed the dkd who left at* To uso ft sailor’s phrase, ywoV* taken a strange task- -what .-re you driving al? What to Too wggl
of me?”
Overton smiled & little gilart~v hut he opened a box of elgere ued pushed them ncroae th„ tthto "Have a cigar? Here's g Ufhk— we’ll talk It over. I'm u«t drvbM at anything I can only say-wttS truth that having keen « nfej death dowg there, and kaowtgg Utp horror of It, I con godanUod Hu# you wanted to live It's taeMf Mi ntfiryBK' •
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I ASHIONS j NEW YORK. May 29. (I’D- A I change has conn- over the more cxj cliiMVt- establishment -. No longer is ! black the aecepted background on which to spin h color. Colored groumtn are taking precedence. Tin- black | I background has suddenly become hanI al, the urge for color which tinges the I entire fashion world quite naturally ! -Ic-vciloping in backgrounds. While this has not become a mass preference it is none the less important for that. Thus, new print- for exclusive fashions take on u fre.-h appeal not only by the use of the distinctive paid, check and stripe motifs previdusly commented on in these columns, hut by such vivid ground colors as capucin, ri val hluo and grayed purple, henna and dark reddish browns in addition to green ami wine reds. It is interesting to note (hat there ate com- i
pnratively few beige grounds in evidence, hut pale yellow beige is, invariablj used in the motifs in place of white. Eccentric rapucine, oddly enough, has proved one of the most effective -hades t- use in printed motifs showing up well on nearly all the colored grounds mentioned when it is contrasted properly with other colors. Prints in which chartreuse occurs are fresh in effect and still new enough to deserve mention. Brown in various tones also ha; become of more than passing interest, the development of brown being reported from foreign as well as our own resorts. Blown is used more often with white than with beige, there being a noticnhle de crease in the amount of beige worn this spring. YelK-ws appear to have replaced it.
SI BSCRIHK FOR ’’THE BANNER”
