The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 June 1929 — Page 4
THE GREENCASTEE DAILY BANNER, MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1929.
n a
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ern
Springing upwards from the heel of thu etocking are two attenuated point,. The design i, simple . . . modern. And yet the design lend, lightness—has a myi»teriou, aprile-like cpiality that suggest, moonlight nights and strange little full, peering from tha
shadows.
The cohweh testure of the stocking, too, is tn the same mood. Silk extend, from top to toe. At
the edge is a dainty picot.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., June 10. (UP) —Hitfh officials of the Federal Government met here today with Governors of the leading oil producing states and representatives of petroleum associations to seek some basis on which legislation may be erected to conserve America’s rapidly
dwindling oil supply.
The conference was to be opened
by Secretary of Interior Wilbur, after which Mark L. Requa, War Time oil director, was to become permanent chairman. He had previously been sworn in as a government official to
fit him for the responsibility. Faced on one side by an inordinate
producting of oil and one the other by bristling anti-trust laws which prevent limitation agreements be-
X F ° tween oil companies, the conference J . <► sought a ba.'i- for an interstate con-
servation compact to which the Fed-
4 ' r 4 eral Government might be a party. J Secretary Wilbur while yet in
Washington, had stated any action taken at the meeting here would be “preliminary and would have no final authority.” The conference, he said, hopes only to recommend legislation to be passed by the interested states. They, he hopes, will pass uniform laws to make conservation effective and yet distribute the burden of a
t \ vj lowered production between them X i II i - 0 equitably. It would be necessary for
{[j congress to give the interstate cotn-
! pact final approval, he said. The present conference, officials ex-
plained, had its inception in a suggestion made several months ago by the federal oil conservation board. At
series of one bond each. « meeting in Washington between :t. $7,040.00 in road bonds of Clov- this body and representatives of the er.lale Township, for the improve- American Petroleum Insi.tute an merit of the Virlev Greenlee, et al. opinion of the Attorney General was Road, in said township, and being in read which ‘lammed the latter s hope denomination of $.’152.00 each. These)of effecting conversation through bonds draw interest at the rate of inter-company agreements, four and one-half per cent, per an- Attorney General Mitchell held num. The first series of said bonds ™ch agreement without government and the first series of interest cou- sanction, which could not be given, ,H,ns of said bonds are due and pay- Probably would be in violation of the able on the loth day of July, 1!>30. Anti-Trust Laws. Shortly afterward,
meat bonds, for the separate roads, | ^ s(irjes of said bom | s ;in(1 nne ;the board suggested that an Interns named herein, and being located!.^ of interest coupons aru (Iue 1 state Compact, approved by Congress, in the respective townships as nam- . m(| p b]fl (iverv six m „ nth . there-(might effect ample conservation of ed. and being in Putnam County, In- aft< . r Sai(| bon(ls are ,| ated j une 1 petroleum while remaining within the
diana, to-wit: ! 15th> 192 <>. S aid bond issue is in 1. $8,000.00 in road bonds of Green- ’ twentj equal series of one bond each, castle and Madison Townships, for The interest on all said bonds be-
1 S. C. PREV0 COMPANY
X
HONORARY DKGRFES
(Continued from page one)
'.CONSERVATION OF OIL SOUGHT
-ry-.-^'dition to his teaching position. Dur-
AT COW-ERENIib.^-^^si^ and in 11)00 at the University of FEDERAL AM) STATU OFFICIALS Colorado. He wn made assistant ti \XD PETROLEUM HEADS AT the chancellor at Washington univer-
COLORADO SPRINGS.
NOTICE OF THE S \LE of FOWNSHIP ROAD l!i)NO> (il PI IN \ M t Ol NT INDI \N A. Notice i.- hereby given that the
undersigned, treasurer of Putnam County, Indiana, will receive sealed bids at his office, in the City of Greencastle, Indiana, up to twelve o’clock, noon, on Saturday, The 22nd Day of June, 1029, for the sale of the following named road improve-
the improvement of the F. C. Tilden, et al. Road, on the township line, between Greencastle and Madison Townships, being in denomination of $100 each, and are dated June 15, 1020. Said bonds draw interest at the rate of four and one-half per cent, per annum; the first series of -aid bonds and the first series of interest coupons on said bonds are due and payable on the 15th day of May, Ifi.'iO. One series of said bonds .iiol one series of interest coupons of said bonds are due and payable every six months thereafter. Said bond issue
ing evidenced by coupons thereto attached, all properly signed. All said bonds are signed by the Board of Commissioners and attested by the county auditor. All said bonds will be sold in accordance with the law’ in such cases made and provided to the highest bidder for not less than par value. A certified check for a sum equal to five per cent, of the amount of bid submitted and an affidavit of non-collusion, as provided by law, shall accompany each bid as a guarantee of a good faith bid. The right is reserved to reject any
able at the office of the county treas-
urer at Greencastle, Indiana. Alva E. l.isby, Treasurer of Put-
nam County, Indiana, at Greencastle, Indiana. 10-2t
is in twenty equal series of one bond j and all bids. All said bonds are pay-
each,
2. $7,120.00 in road bonds of Washington Township, for the improvement of 1 he Andrew Trester, et al. Road, in said township, and being in
denomination of $35(100 each, dated , » April 15th, 1921). Tin -e bonds draw EROM TOkiO To REUNION interest at the rate of four and one- MIDDLETOWN, Conn., June 10— half per cent, per annum. The first ! Barring late entries from Viadivostock series of these bonds and the first | or Rangoon, Count Ayskeh Kabaysories of interest coupons are due ania of Tokio, probably will be honand payable on the 15th dav of ,IuW, j ored as the alumnus who traveled the ID.'iO. One d ie nf all said bonds I longe-t distance to attend the Wesley-
and one cri of interest coupons of all said bond, are due and payable every i\ months thereafter. Sai«l bond issue is in twenty equal
an commencement exercises June 1417. Count Kabayama has announced he will attend the fortieth reunion of his class, the clas- of 1889.
pale of the law.
This suggestion was followed in turn by President Hoover's calling the interested states and oil associations to meet in conference here to dis-
cuss the compact.
Seven state- - New Mexico, Kansas, Wyoming, California, Colorado, Oklahoma, and Texas—were to be represented here today by their governors or their appointees. Invitations were extended also to the Independent Oil Producers’ Association, the Rocky Mountain Oil and Gas Association, the California Oil and Gas Association, and the Oklahoma-Kansas Division of the Mid-Continent Royalty Owners’ Association.
TVstintr New
Soil Builder
sky in 1921 and this place he held until his election to the chancellor-
ship this winter.
He is a member of the American Philological association, Archaeological Institute of America, Modem Language association of America, American Folklore society, America) Association of University Professors. American Librarians association, Ph Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Theta, and th< University Club of St. Louis. He is e frequent contributor to philological and literary journals and studies. Dr. Throop is a /msin to Miss Jennie Throop and to Dr. J. A. Throop of Greencastle, and has relatives in Brazil and Terre Haute. While a student in DePauw university Dr. Throop made an excep tional scholastic record and took
many honors.
HER PIPE BURNS HOME WESTPORT, Conn., June 8. (UP) —Miss Ida Tyler, just an old fashioned person who prefers a pipe t< a cigarette, has been warned to mind where she throw- her matches. Recently while Miss Ida was reclining on her couch, ashes fell from her pip< and -et the house afire. She escape) injury. SUIT FOR DIVORCE Ina Malone filed a suit for divorce in the Circuit court Monday morning through her attorney, W. M Sutherlin against Eugene Malone. The affidavit states that they were married on January 20, 1920 and that the defendant deserted her on Sep tember 20, 1926. The two children, Eugene Frances, age 8 years, and Martha Ann, age 0 years, are asked to be placed in the custody of tht plaintiff.
COMMENCEMENT CLOSES (Continued from page or.e)
[, Edsel Ford’s $10,000 Door
MICHIGXN MAN FINDS USE OF SWEDISH PEAS INCREASES PRODUCTIVENESS. GREENVILLE, Mich., June 10 (UP)— From three peas “smuggled” into the United States quite accidentally six years ago, an industry which seems destined to contribute millions of dollars in \alue to American fanners hits been developed by Dr. William Hansen, local veterinarian. The peas were found in two quarts of Swodi. h vetch seed which Dr. Hansen purchased for use on his farm in Kent county. He was attracted by their appearance and planted them by themselves to observe their growth characteristics. Hansen’s Swedish peas, as they have become known, promise to be one of the nation’s leading soil build- ; ers. They make a larger foliage growi th than any other variety of field peas. A vigorous root system, knotted j with nitrogen-bearing nodules, ex- | tensd six to 12 feet in length often, I with a prolific growth. The original three peas have been increased to nine bushels. Indications ! are that they w ill \ ield about 30 bush- | els of seed to the acre, according to I W. ('. Cribbs, Michigan State college ' regional extension worker. The col- | lege has to test this season. Dr. Hansen has observed a marked ! improvement in productiveness of soil ! in each field where the peas have been J grow)) during the la-t six years.
Photo by courtesy of the Gorham Co. hand wrought bronz* door, finished in nickel, was made by the Gorham Compan.. for the Detroit home of Edsel Ford. It was ^ one of the renters of interest fa the recent Arrliltectnral League Show in New York where ft war displayed hv the Gorham Company. A master craftsman and half a dozen ass(s»nnt« spent several months ,completing the piece which 1j entirely baud-wrought.
THIS WEEK’S WEATHER Showers probable about Tuesday j or Wednesday ami again toward end! of week; temperature near or slight-j ly below normal at beginning of ; week, and mostly above normal re* 1 matnder ot week.
Helen Gertrude Hile. Leonard Earl Howell. Robert Yingling Johnson. Elouise Kemp. Harold Daniel Koenig. Henry Harvey LaFuze. Edith Jayne Leavitt. Agnes Cobb Leete. Donald John Lehman. Alva Newton Lucas. *Mable Ruth McCullough. James Poynter McEvoy. Carl Vincent McMillan. Virginia Lilian .Miller. Beulah Mollet. Leahbelle Kathryn Morman. Charles Alvin Murray. Richard Cranston Murray. Robert Hobson Myers. Florence Josephine Patteson. Perry Fobert Pickering. Ruth Cross Poucher. Helen Margaret Ranton. Louise Cecilia Richert. Vern Wade Robinson. Herbert Louis Scheiner. *Leon Herbert Schmidt. Paul Russell Shumaker. Feryl Faun Sipe. Mary Josephine Springer. William Vere Sutherlin. Leon Edmond Thompson. Raymond I*-ynolds Thompson. Roy Gordon Tobias. Mary Louise Travis. Josephine Mary Trimble. James Douglas Tyson. Knoeful Lee Van Metre. Paul Edward Vawter. Dolph Martin Veatch. Carl Henry August Vornholt. Helen Olga Weber. Frances Wingerd. Ryatt Youngblood. •Dickey Leroy Mitchell, Jr. (’28). (Graduates) Dorothy Acton. Dorothy Violet Adams. Dorothea Faye Aikman. E.-thcr Elizabeth Ake. Margaret Allen. Willard LaVern Arnold. Russell Edwin Arthur. •Harry Lee Ault. Laura Jean Baker. James Harland Ball. •Joseph Burton Barrows. Mabel Marie Batchellor. Irvin Raymond Byrum. George David Bateman. •Fern Olive Beck. •Frederic Olds Bishop. Paul Roberson Boatright. Mary Evelyn Bond. Robert Ingram Boctorff. John Churchill Bowers. Esther Mae Boyle. Willard Kate Bray. Freda May Brookbank. Harley Emmett Burrkhalter. George William Burket. l-ewix Hewitt Carpenter. Janet Katherine Carson. •Mabel Gertrude Carter. Martha Elizabeth Case. Louise Elizabeth Chittick. John Kenyon Collins. Robert Duncan Conner. Dorothy O'Neal Cook. Cathryn Carolyn Cooper. Arthur Blake Cornthwaite. Leo John Costello. Marshall Paul Ciabill. Lillian Roberta Dale.
♦Obed Wells Daniels. Robert Partridge Doolittle. ♦Walter Ennis Eisenmann. Dorothy Evelyn Eller. Jesse Elliott. Thomas Hubert Ellison. Lowell Kightly Ennes. •Herbert Ferdinand Erdmann. Raymond Osier Evans. Ernest Asa Firebaugh. Karl Tower Flanigan. T -J ^ J Sarah Catherine Gilmore. Darrell Hayward Gooch. Fay Allen Graham. Joe Collins Green. Carol Rachel Hackman. J. Armand Harris. Mildred Lucille Hart. Hugh Stoner Hauck. Gwendolyn Elizabeth Hautau. Fred William Haytcr. Frank Eugene Heilman. Elizabeth Hines. Eudolph Holycross. Edwin Ray Huffer. T T Janies Forest Huffman. Charles Hollis Hull. Evard Edward Isaac. Helen Susan Jordan. Mary Elizabeth Kesler. Jane Ella Kimble. Y~i Don Alfred Lamphear. •June Landis. ^ Irene Virginia Laughlin. Eloise Magley Lewton. James Clifton Loveless. Sarah Frances McBride. George Brant McCoy. Harry I,ane McCullough. ♦Robert Rhea McCullough. Marian McFadden. Malcolm Thurber MacVicar. Medford Emerson Maxwell. Lillian Moore. Josephine Grace Morgan. Margaret Ann Morris. ♦Charles Everett Mull. James Westley McGavin Murdoch, Jr. ♦Mary Ruth Neal. Lorene Tinsley Nees. Kenneth Virgil Nelson. • Mary Josephine Nelson. Verna Louise Nichols. Everett John Niergarth. ♦Nichols Dwight Noble. Vernon Hammond Noe. Mary Frances Page. •Pauline Marshall Patton. Genevieve Emma Plleeger. Benjamin Mathews Philbrick. Mary Elizabeth Piersol. Minnie Almeda Pitchford. •Maurice Herbert Porter. Alfred Middleton Potts. Allen Fitz Randolph. Thomas Bowen Kankcn. Robert Houston Reiner. Robert Kennon Renfro. Katherine Lucille Reynolds. Italph Emerson Rice. Helen Millicent Richards. Mary Marjorie Riddle. Gordon Taylor Ritter. Agnes Elizabeth Roberts. Shiro Sasamori. Nathan Isaac Schoolfield. Eugene Bright Schricker. Russell Arthur Schroeder. Harry Vaughn Scott. Frances Sharp. Paul Kenneth Sharp. Geraldene Reid Sherrill. Merlin Willis Shellabarger. Floyd Herbert Stark. •Everett Winton Thomas. Grace Louise Timmins. Hansel Herbert Tower. Laurel Esco Trueblood. Junior Lloyd Trump. Helen Agnes Urban. •Eugene Crosson Volz. Paul Raymond Wade. Robert Cyrus Wade. Raymond Nicholas Weber. Dorothy Marie Wcise. Raymond Henry Weismiller. Mary Lucile Weissert. Daniel Stewart Wentworth. ♦Helen Augusta Wemeke. William Daniel Whitsitt. Harold Dean Wildermuth. Anna Emetine Williams. Frances Elizabeth Wilson. •Ruth Eleanor Yeager. •Calvin William Zimmerman. •Diploma to 1m; awarded upon completion of work in Summer School. Bachelor of Music Jeannette Gipe Carter. Mary Hayes Chamberlain. Margaret Ellen Dennis. Katharine Rebecca Dunlavy. Frederick Harold Farmer. Miriam Eunice Jack. Theresa Magdalene Kaney. Helen Kathleen Keith. Dorothy Vernon Klumpp. Mary Alice Murray, Leslie Ormond McCollum. Marion Emelyn Bought. Bachelor of School Music Lorah Lee Church. Margaret Muriel Current. Margery Florence Dick. Erma Lorene DulTield. Henrietta Everitt. Helen Kuzella Gordon. Wilna Lanore Hunt. Eddie Irene Loud. Margaret Mariah Lumpkin. Gretchen Mary Markle. Nelva Pauline Shull. Ella Lenora Shutes. Heva Berniece Thompson. Mozelle Elector Tracy. Dorotha Elois Walls. Master of Arts Ressie Jenkins Fix. George William Pierce. Doctor of Laws Edgar Blake. George Reeves Throop. Doctor of Science William Niles Wishard.
VONCASTit
7 AND 8:45 P. M. 10c-30c
TONHJHT Final Showing V HAINES, A MAMS MAN
Al)l)KD “A ( Lust bHAVp AND \|(;(| NKW$
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY (NIGHTS ONLY) 7 AND 8:15 P. M.
10f-)0t
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T.ANE GREYS STAIRS or SAND The smashing giant of “Beggars of Life”! The underworld boss in “Chinatown Nights”! Wallace Beery! In the greatest role of his career! Zane Grev’s famous story! A lighting man’s hopeless love and heroic sacrilicc for a woman! Olio Brower’s thrilling drama! Chester Conklin’s inimitable comedy! A cast of stars! 0 Garwiount picture
£
, u)dk Wallace Beery Jean Arthur Chester Conklin ADDED JACK DUFFY (OMKDY, TOPHs AND FABLE'
COMING Thur.-Fri.—“TWO WEEKS OFF| With DOROTHY M.UKA1LL AND I\U\ MII.IIAU.
FINE COMMENCEMENT PROGRAMS—BRIM. Mill! IlillNIM
DEALERS SEEK LEE STATUETTE
carved on the bed.
The wolds wn plainly visibleiM wi rkmni rnnoved leav- at: «■ which had partially "t-La ten’s grave marker. The me 14 Ann Luyten, Wife u: William M ten, Died September 9, 175, 27th Year of Her Age." St IIOOI LOl DSPF.AKERj
NEW HAV1 N
—The principal m a erammarA here ha ad< pted a nedern w*)®!
addre sing all hi pupil "H terrupting routine U- 1
LONDON, June 10. — Curiosity dealers of England and Scotland have joined the world-wide search for the ! missing statuette of General Robert i E. Lee. | Thi- statuette, which curiously [enough few Americans have ever seen is believed to bn somewhere in Scot-
land.
Sixty-five years ago the statuette was modeled in Berlin by the American sculptor, Edward V. Valentine,
of Richmond, Va. It was brought to ,—„ - ^ Liverpool, where it was sold at pub-I with an assembly. l |ll ' u l ™ lie auction for the benefit of the Con- i I). Lambert in .ail'd radi J
federate cause.
Since its sah' in Liverpool nothing has been heard of the statuette al-! though it is believed to have been purchased by a Scot. The Chamber !
of Commerce of Richmond has insti- 1
tuted a world-wide search fer the ROHDLN FU I M.K work "f its famous sculptor. MF\sl HI! IIEF<HIE W" *
o ; MILWAUKEE, June 10
FOUR POSTER HEADBOARD I Frank D 1 gj
MARKS GRAVE 189 Y F \RS ! Illinois, W1 ' ' CHARLESTON, S.C., June 10 (UP) 1 "
—Still intact after serving 189 years j as a tombstone in St. Michael’s c nietery here, a four-poster headboard of I an old wooden bed has been uncover- i
ed in the cemetery.
The unusual marker was part of the bed used by Mis. Mary Ann Luyten
during her lifetime. Some years be-! J u,u ' -’ K , i,j r f c.\«M fore her death -he decided that its; 11"’ ^ ol1 " 11 ' | ( rom t# enduring tidewater cypress wood ' ,a - s m ' , nt ^ !' ...;n „„vir
should make a particularly satisfac- His addns
tory tombstone. In writing her will, phases el >u |la M " ^ ll ii]ia<*|
.... in all room- and a radio*!" microphone attachment in hio® When he wishes to addn - tire school he .'peak into Hit i*®
phone.
before
more than . • irt 2(jth, the far-reaching “l
culture." Lowden's
„ - talk on ngriculW" j
constitute the principal adr^J
annual convention or » i "s
13th annual .y^ international, which oj" ' j kee June 23 and will *
here w.ll cover
( phases of farm
sue directed that this be done and or- ( discussion " 1 J „. n ture •J’*’
the inscription which was to be lions ctiin'i
FEED FEED FEED
The American Milling Co., of C"' 1 ' a int J has opened one of its Chain feed sto ^ [J Harris Milling Co., Mill, which they i e {| purchased. These Stores are no (. run c \,nco it but to distribute our own nm'
feeds.
One of our leading sellers is \mro 2II"a Juf So) feed is the original Pailfiller Dairy feed with iw Meal in each hag. Price $2.01 per 100 lbs. ^ gutl ,rn "H Another feed is our Amen AH Mash (bi<k I" Price $2.9'). Also our 28% Pig Menl. $3.01. ^ ^ santl 11 ^ These prices are in keeping with all of < !" r l ^Vmco feed'. ity feeds at u price you can afford to use, nu.
Amco Service Store FRANK HAliU
Muiia^
