The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 June 1929 — Page 4
(THE GEEENCSSTBE OTHTCi BANNER,'■ MONDAY, JUNE 17, ly^y.
i e *F LONL STAR SPECIAL
m r ~ \ '
for
•*
Wednesday, June 19, only TUs good cojpe
SEAL In 1, 2, 3 and 3 pound \ cans. Never in Dulk
1 lb., 35 cents, or 3 lbs. for
RAND Croun'i Unground or Pulverued C/me (£ Sanborn The Importer $1.00
CROCAN & MILLER Spring 1 & Washington Sts.
’ ative poace with no enemies save his savage tigers, gorillas and elephants until the coming of another woman into their lives like an avenging nemesis. Estelle Taylor plays this role, a vivid Oriental charmer, beautiful and deadly. The triangle turns into one of the most astounding plots in literature, rivaling the most fantastic flights of fancy. The setting- are gorgeous. The great river and village, an artificial river built near tho studio giounds, the jungle with its wild beasts, screaming parakeet and monkeys and the gorgeous Oiiental home in the wildneress where the great gorilla gets loose to spread death and destruction in the dramatic climax are wonderfully authentic. The -cenes in which Lupe Velez is seen in the mid t of thousands of pigeons which lise like a cloud about her is an especially beautiful bit of pictorial technique ably handled by Tod Browning, who wrote and directed the vivi I new play . Tonight, Richard Dix in “The Wheel of Life,” will have its final
showing.
LOSE AT CHESS
AT THE YONCASTI.K Grim adventure in a tropical wilderness, and a stdl more grim conflict of human emotion. , love .and retribution, are the element that make great drama out of “Where East Is Ea-t," Lon Chaney' new Metro-Godlwyn-Mayer thrill drama which will op ■ a two day’s run
starting Tuesday. “Where East is East,” is laid in the jungles of Siam, afar from civilization, where human lives and human passions run rampant. Chaney plays the role of “Tiger” Haynes, trapper of wild bea ts in his jungle fastness, and here, with the one love of his life, his daughter, played by Lupe Y< lez, ho dwells in compar-
BEVERLY, Mass., June 17—This little city has returned to its normal quiet life after all the excitement attending an international chess match th it lasted four year , seven months and four days. The match begun on November 1, 1024, v. a played by mail. A team representing the United Shoe Machinery Company of Leicester, England, won the tournament, defeating a team representing the local plant of that company, 12 games to 8.
Todays Roads Must Withstand Heavy Battering
SHOULD BE DESIGNED FOR THE HEAVIEST TRAFFIC. NOT FOR PASSENGER ( AKS ALONE
From 10 to 14 tons is the limit states have affixed as the largest burden that a loaded truck may lawfully impose upon tale highways. Usually the greatest load that may be carried on one rear wheel is four tons. Trucks loaded to the limit have little effect on the road Surface while standing. But the moment the static, or standing load, becomes a “live” load as the vehicle moves, then the strain on the highway is much increased. When a truck moving at a fair rate of speed strikes a slight obstruction on the road surface, the blow dealt by a wheel may be several times the weight carried by the wheel. For example, one wheel of a truck loaded to the legal limit may strike the load surface a blow of 10 tons or more. With commercial traffic increasing rapidly, and admittedly to the public benefit, the modern road must be deigned not only with passenger cars but with the heaviest bus and truck traffic in mind. Inferior roads, roads of no real structural strength, cannot he expected to carry present day traffic without breaking down. Pavements may now be built with every expectancy that they will carry
traffic 25 or more years—and smoothly. These pavements will carry the legal load countless times daily, yeai in and year out, with no fear of costly deterioration. Recently in Chicago repairs on a through artery compelled the detouring of traffic on side streets, streets that were giving good, though not excellent, service. Within one month the pavements on these side streets were utterly ruined by the heavy pounding ovr them. This is hut an instance where economy in road building may not be economy at all. but rather parsimonious buying. There is no place in the transportation scheme, where traffic is fairly heavy, for pavements that will not stand up under the demands imposed upon them by heavy vehicles, which nowadays are to be found in growing numbers wherever there are halfway “decent” roads and streets.
CONGRATULATIONS to the % ** Lone Star Cement Co. < and see us t For Bargains , / G. C. MURPHY CO. “Service With A Smile”
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M.W PONTOON FOR SALVAGE WORK INVENTED IN SWEEDEN STOCKHOLM, June 17—An entirely new kind of pontoon said to he of great importance for amarine salvage work and far easier to handle than the old type which is bulky and unwieldly, has just been invented by a Sweedish enigneer, Ragnar Blomquist. The new device is collapsible and can be folded together and thus ea.-ily be transported. When submerged, it opens into its natural size and is filled with air through a hose leading from the compressor of the salvage ship. The new invention, which has been patented in all seafaring countries, ha-i aroused great interest among shipping experts in Sweden and abroad.
M?ny prominent persons, includ- ; y \s suicide was blame"dV«n^ ing fotmer governor Warren T. Me and worrk over threatened ' C lay, atended The cause of Fngar- proceedings against him ° *
B I *3
11:00 A. M. to 2:00 P. M. At Lone Star Cement Co. Plant at Limedale WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19 Sec the Largest Cement Mill in the Would Make Cement. K very one Will he Conducted through the llig Cement Mill.
NEW FIRE CAUSE. BAKERSFIELD, Calif., June 17— ■Mid to forest and grass fire menaces, the cigarette-smoking aviator. Fire warden, R. V’. W r ood of Kern county said the first three grass fires in his territory this year undoubtedly re.*tried from cigarets tossed from pessing airplanes. One fire destroyed 25GU acres of grass land, he said. Discussion Of Law Observance
SAN FRANCISCO, June 17—Discussion of whether law-breaking is in< leasing and what trefitment will feature the annual conference of the National Probation Association to be held here June 24-28. The President of the Association, (irorgo W. Wicker haul* has recently been appointed Chairman of tlm National Law Enforcement Commission by President Hoover. The speakers on the program are judges, psychologists, and probation officers from every part of the country. Among the subjects to be analyzed at this Conference are the causes of law-breaking, with particular emphasis on the 18th Amendment, the way crime news is treated in the newspapers, the worked unemployment and unsatisfactory living conditions, lack of parental vigilance, and corruption in public life and the influence of political parties. Among the speakers on the progiam will be Curtis D. Wilbur, United States Circuit Judge, former Secretary of the Navy and one-time Judge of the Juvenile Court of Los Angeles. o FOGARTY FUNERAL. SOUTH BEND, Ind., June 17—The funeral of Edward Fogarty, G!!. warden of the Cook county jail at Chicago and formerly head of the Ind ana state prison at Michigan ('it i was held here Saturday afternoon Fogarty committed suicide here at the home of a nephew by firing two revolver shots into his head.
LONE STAR SPECIAL
for
Wednesday, June 19 (Only)
w q m •
**V
10 LB. BUCKET OF LARD FOR $1.50
W. H. EITELJOGRE
S'
CONGRATULATIONS ' to the LONE STAR CO. and Best Wishes for an ENJOYABLE BARBECUE / on Wednesday, June 19 L. & H. CHEVROLET SALES
BAND CONCERT andevenm S > resents for Everybody / EVERYTHING IS FREE
Lone Star Bargain Day Special 20% OFF On Any KODAK or BROWNIE Wednesday, June 19th, One Day Only Oft that Kodak for your vacation. A large assorting of the latest models, Black and Colors. MULLINS DRUG STORE .-mf" West Side Square.
