The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 May 1930 — Page 3
Itful I ho«tJ I i
iSSIHED ADS Pavements Are
DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA TUESDAY, MAY'lS, 1930.
V ‘ ^ ' \ tfC# PAGE THREE
t‘ABF. WHEEL HR IS NEW m:t < oa( h at brazil
U\I,E a /nod used piano-
jewelry and Music
2-6-9-13-41.'.
[fork’s
—Cabbage plants, 5Hc
L], Gilbert Chadd. lO-Ilp
leALE—Brick house, W'ashinfr- ‘ Arlin/ton. Fine oil station one 144. l--3t SAl.l- : Beautiful frn/rant Iflowel of all kinds for your liners ;ind l>arty decorations.
12-3t.
Cl , t:-Baby chicks and start-1 .. , 0 ' U ' h 1 ! I 'l Kh Phillips, director of at a jazz party in an apartment, ' Leifhorns, Orpingtons, / * <*I 1IH I > I ()OIS, atlllt ‘ tl1 '^ 1,1 B'azil Hi/h school, was swings into the ten-cent store, then Ueds,—Clearwater Hatch- • ( 1"'°'noted to jirincipal of .Junior High into a red-hot night club, with a va- ' l-je, Ind. 13-15-17-3ts.! p A RMpR . nv „ _ an ‘ l ma< * e director and coach riety of backgrounds and much ac-
Ai.Z V ^. AVEMF:NTS ,,f a " " u, 'b |l,r athletics and Harold tion.
vi. ilM H u m N v1 I HI < K '' rr : '? e ” h , eel ‘‘ r ’ 1 " i,t ' h ° f Seyn,our “ Thp Girl frnnl "'"olworth’s” has
' Iigh school, was added to the staff, 1 ronjance, nation and pep through-
- l be city school board announced today j out.
Profitable farming is dependent up-^ ern ‘ C ’*'' nn ’ -Junior High school Miss White sings several songs, on good highway transportation; and coat '* 1 ' was relieved of coaching re-; and also dances in the night club the better the roads the more profit- fl l’ on s'bilities and given additional scenes. This talented young girl, able the farming. This is the conelu- aca ^ ern ' t duties, but along with other ' who has never been on the stage sion reached in a recent survey con-1 en ^ eac ^ prs , " ill assist in the de- j and who was a script girl in Hollyducted by the Agricultural Kxpeii- bartment ol athletics. j wood three year.- ago, has developed merit Station of Cornell University i , ' n< " basket liall coach comes to into one of the most promising songFcwer motor trucks are owned by * !raz ',* " ' l!l a " l ,uta f' on as °ne of the and-dunce artists on the screen, and farmers living along dirt roads, the slal ''' outstanding coaches. He ha> she has shown in a number of picsurvey reveals. Only one half of the , * l ' v< 'b ) l ,l ‘d basket hall at Seymour, a tures that she is a born comedienne, farmers living along dirt roads own 1 nal1 bool, to a point where Tonight Richard Barthelme.v in trucks in New York, while three-fif-i tlle scho01 b" 111 '» own with the top , “Sen of the Gods”, the all-talking ths of those along pavements operate ! lotCh< ‘ ls of tlu> southern Indiana and iVtaphone Production, will have its them. The farmers near hard surfae- ' always a mPnaf( ‘ to Bedford, a bus- | final showings. ed pavements drove their trucks an k<t bal1 ^hool. Seymour | o average of 726 miles more than the has . won a hitt ma J orit >' ,,f i,s Kame \ T GRANADA farmers served by dirt roads. i during the time Mr. Wheeler coached,
This indicates that the rural dis- at Sp .vm° u f—Brazil Times. tricts served by pavements have been n able to market their produce farther COPYRIGHT GREEN I.ABF1
away from home, thereby obtaining better prices. The Cornell survey points out that the farmer living
tthway guard. , thru Thursday will be R. K. O.’s late i Thp “Girl from Woolworth’s” starts release “The Night Parade” featuring I
H.
IsAI.K -Two Royal Wilton 12 feet square; one lt!x 15 gjngei wing machine.— Hank Bittle, Phone 2(14. 13-lt.
o
—tor Kent— RENT:—Desirable Modern L| apartment, close to square, franklin street. Phone 210.
13-2t.
■1)1:\T:—Three or four un|,i moms. Phone fifia-Y. 12-3t.
tENT—A garago ^ 413 F. |st reel. 12-2t RENT — Three-room modern j apartment; close in, priance. 41H south Jackson St. 12-2ts.
alongthe dirt road can only economic-
ally deliver to the
JlENT Modern light houseami sleeping rooms. Phone ;jri' block from square. 12-2-p.
KENT—{Two story modern -Ferd Lucas. 18-t.f. Wanted— |EI) fiend animals.—Cfreen|i er < Jo.— Phone 889.12-lt -News and Banner boys |- • of eleven and ^-ave your name at once at ice, if you want a Route. C. J. PEER AND, Cir. Dept. liscellaneous— [-ladies Red Parker Founilteward. Call Banner Office. 13-2p (Trinity Tier Mash to .start chicks. Putnam Farm llub- ativo A.-soriation, Ine.— ■ Y. 6-E-O-D. NOTICE Irons please bring the bill been mailed to them when |tu pay accounts. Greencastle Co.
ON EA< H BI DDY POPPY Arrangement have been completed for the sale of Buddy Poppies- in Grcencastlr by Je e M. Lee Post No.
v , lo, ‘ al markp t. 1550, of the Vet rails of Foreign
Farmers on paved roads, however, War
have their choice of three markets;. The name of the Buddy Poppy is cty markets, local market' or ship-1,,.,,, t< , Vll ,, y th „ v . p. W. and no p.ng points, or buyers who come to „ M o not author ized by the local post "■i'e' 11 ™" , . I will he permitti d to sell them. Each The high cost of poor roads is f| ow ,,,. is labelled, and as further brought to light in the Cornell sut- precaution Y. F. \Y. poppv sellers will vey. Snow prevented New York farm- bear malentials of i.lentifieation, it ers 0 n pavements for hauling full w;l announced v.-terdav hv the Wal truck loads on inferior roads 90 days [ chairman of the V. V. W. Buddy
a year, of a quarter of the time. | p I)py , al p i, lns
Tb p survey contains reports from ‘“Pack up your troubles in your 48 farmers living along dirt roads | 0 i,l kit bag and smile, smile, smile.* who could not hold their crops for a That’ the keynote of the spirit in taise in price, hut Who had to sell W 1 I roust! - the United Stater when the roads were passable. The disable,1 and ly ex-service men,
“Yitgnhond King” To Show To-Night
For The Last Times.
survey reads: “The following estimat es of their losses were made by eight farmers: $2,009, $1,0(10, $700, $300, $250, $100, $100, $1,160. The last named amount was lost on potatoes which could not he moved when the price
was high.”
The cost of building hard surfaced highways cannot justly be measured in terms of taxation alone. The benefits of year round pavements are manifold; the losses farmers are yearly accumulating through poor marketing conditions would oftentimes alone more than outweigh the annual cost of first class pavements.
H REE—For ths hauling at Elm Street. 12-2ts. K)N DINNEB "ill he served It Craft Inn tomorrow. 11-Wed-Sat. tf.
Mer Mash produces healthy |l'utnam Farm Bureau Coop"iiciation, Inc.—Phone 713-0-EO-D. IdEGA PI Sorority will have |j ' lie at the Court House, May 17th, 7 a. m. 13-15-16-3
|\,ill bo om bartor on duty Jiing from 6 p. m. to 8 p. m. flinimons. 13-2p ^TURE Auction Sale—Comof household goods, beds, I'h.iii , dining room set, d>shrugs and many other house |<h . liroadstreet Home, 733 guinary Street, Friday, May [ (»• m. 13-3t-. Board will give a benefit uturduy at 2:30 at Tri Delt I' 1 u - an 60 cent . All town invited. If you wish to shies, call Dorothy Rutter at Gamma Delta House. Tea Krved. 13-4ts. o f ard of TH \nks l 1 deed very grateful to the riving me their ,-uppnrt P 1 ' fur the republican nomCounty cecorder, and I mJ sincere thanks | l ' , ciation to each and every MRS. FRSIF BF.NF.FIEL.
EDISON SCHOLARSHIP BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May % (UP) —The State meet in the contest for the Thomas A. Edison four-year scholarship and the liberal arts scholarship for high school boys in Indiana will be held Saturday, May 10, at Indianapolis, with Robert K. Dirks, of Greencastle, still in the running, according to announcement here today of Mrs. Adele K. Bittner, of the Indiana university extension division, who is in charge of the statistical count of grading. Dirks is one of .30 winners of district contests for the Filison scholarship. Seventeen high school boys will take part in the state meet for the liberal arts scholarship. The winner of the liberal arts scholarship will be entitled to four years’ attendance at a choice of institutions of higher learning in the state with all tuition fees remitted. The winner of the Edison conto-t will receive the Edison-Indiann auxiliary scholarship which will entitle him to attendance it his choice of several institutions of higher learning in the state with tuit'oh fees remitted. The latter winner also will he given a free trip to Orange, N. .1., where he will repre sent Indiana in the national Edison contest for n four-year sc holarship nt a technical school of his own choic' 1 . The examinations on Saturday of this week will he held in the Senate chamber of the State House tit Indianapolis at nine o’clock, with a committee from the Indiana University school of education in charge. The examination- will 1"' standardized and will conn blue throughout the day. Following tF exammaUons Saturday, u small group o' the ones making the highevt grades will be asked to turn for > -rsonnl interviews with members of the Edison committee on the lib ral arts committee, which i.c headed hy President W. L. Bryan of Indiana University. These interviews will be held the latter part of May and at that time the 'tale winners will be chosen.
NOTICE
ciippl it heroo- of Chateau Thierry and the Argonn , of St. Mihiel and Verdun, ar" working these days to make th thousand, of scarlet poppies which will gleam in significant tribute in the buttonholes of all America on Memorial Day,” said Mr. Frank Ashworth. Each gentiin Buddy Poppy carries a copyright label whieh identifies it as the genuine handiwork of disabled and needy ex-service men. The majority are math in government hospitals through an arrangement with the U. S. eterans’ Bureau, and a total of 6,000,00(1 will be completed in readiness for the opening of the sale in every section of the country. The sale proceeds are devoted to relief activities, a portion being al lotted to the maintenance anil i x pansion of the . F. W. National Home for widows and orphans of ex-serv-ice men, at Eaton Rapids, Michigan. The success of the 1929 sale has facilitated the election of new building, during the past year, and a number of additional children and mothers have been thus accommodated. The home site covers 512 acres. The necessity for adequate funds for the relief and welfare work among the ex-service men and their dependent - continues to exist, and there i an increasing number of needy veterans whose health has finally given way as a result of war-time experiences, making them no longer capable of self-support.
Miwles
VONCASTLE
1 I HE M ARKETS iNAPOLIS, May 13 (UP) — "''I't 7,0(10; holdovers 369; P '' "K : bulk 1M12M lh.' 10.- ' mall Iota 10.40; 250f f) -b'.15; 1.30-160 lbs 9.76-10; f 1 packing sows 8.25rpfp ipts 1500; calves 1100; ' 1 la- es 2f.30c off; few light P l - ; J'idding down to 9 and p others; heifer supply ex’’w lights 9-10; not many , ll P to 11; beef cows are 5-UO-7.50; few at 8-8.60; low l an . < 'U'ters 4-5.75; vealets 10.50 down.
Pay Your telephone account on or before the 15th of each ' month.
Greencastle Telephone Co.
LOANS ( ash In A Hurry . $300 Or~Less
If your are long on hills and short on cash, that's NOBODY’S BUSINESS If you tell your friends about it, then it soon becomes EVERYBODY’S BUS1 NESS
If 25 to $300 will heln you see us. That's OUK BUSINESS Indiana LOAN CO. tA a 1 E. Washington Street — • 2 Phone 15
Accotding to announcement made today hy Manager Walter Bidwell of the Granada Theatre, the production now playing at the Granada "The Vagabond King" will close it's local engagement here tonight instead
tomorrow night.
The contract agreement was understood that should the Sunday's gross receipt.' exceed a figure interesting enough to hold the picture over for a fourth day’s showing, Greencastle
Hugh Trevor and Aileen Pringle.
“NIGHT PARADE” OPENS RUN TOMORROW AT THE GRANADA
“Vagabond King" Plays Last Times Tonight
How Broadway revels after dark is seen and heard in Radio Pictures’ all-talking “Night Parad one of the year’s outstanding dramatic achievements, coming Wednesday and Thursday to the Granada Theatre. Plotting, thrills, romance—all blend to make “Night Parade” an attraction that i- winning the plaudits of critics
and fans the country over.
As a background for tie story in which Hugh Trevor, Dorothy Gulliver, Aileen Pringle, Lloyd Ingraham, Lee Shumway, Robert Ellis and others, have outstanding roles, is a fast moving panorama of life as it is liv. d
along the great White Way.
The theme has to do with a young boxing champion who is not only the idol of the world but the object of t! - votion on the part of his father and j foster sister. A plot is hatched in the lahrynth of Manhattan night lif< whieh seriously threatent.- the lov**, of honor and standing of Bobby Murray, i played by Hugh Trevor. How it j works out forms tremenous drama. | “Night Parade” is taken from the j stage play written hy George Abbott,) Edward Pararfiore and Hyatt Daab. I In the Radio Pictures’ production, tin stage play is augmented with action
would have opportunity to view th"
picture yet Wednesday of this week, and many big setting that would not
WE SELL GASOLINE KEROSENE LUBRICATING OIL All Kinds Of I. F. B. CHICKEN FEED Trinilv Mer Mash Growall Mer Mash W E DO GRINDING Putnam Farm Bureau Co-operative Association, Inc. Successor To Campbell I»ros. IJitt 1 Klcvator Telephone 7I.'I-Y.
but since the receipts of this picture were far below the standard of what was expected of a picture of this class to draw, the production will close its
local run tonight.
he possible in the narrow confines of the stage. Thp set designed and built under the supi rvision of Max Reo, RKO art supervisor, as the “web" in whbh
“The Vagabond King" is a beauti- Trevor is trapped, is an example o ful all color masterpiece and Para- the newest trends in studio . etting
mount’s very best offering of the year and it is hoped that those viewing the picture to-night for the last times will at least bring the business up to a figure that will not cause the I/ocal Theatre Owner to he at a tremendous loss. ’ Opening Wednesday and playing
being modernistic to the nth degree. Tonight “The Vagabond King" with the two Broadway singing stars, Dennis King and Jeanette MacDonald, will have its final showings. The picture is all in color and based on the famous .-tage produeton of the same name.
BAD L<>R 1HF. HOMIvBKFAVLRS decision, company officials said: ; “We are taking no chances. We dis- ... ,1-in continued manufacture of the caps MB RIGAN ( > • •>> after the supreme court ruling because Manufactur - of one of the chief pro- w(} wprp no (, sul - 0 that customers
ducts of the H. W. Ang ten company who had order'd them would accept li'ire—bottle cap- -hit- been discon the orders after they were delivered, tinned, company officials announced The company of course, does not inA United States Supreme court de- tend that any cops manufactured vision that manufacturers of any de- ! should be used in the making of home vices us'd in making home brow could brew, although there is no question be prosecuted under the prohibition j that many of them were bought for law was given ns the reason for the that purpose, discontinuation. i o In an announcement regarding the SUBSCRIBE FOR “THE BANNER”
Alice While < nming In "Girl from \\ ool wort hs”—Tonight, “Son of the Gods” Alice White, the youngest star in Hollywood, again sings and dances in her newest all-talking First Natinnal and Vitaphnne picture whieh comes to the Voncastle Theater on Wednesday and Thursday. “The Girl from Woolworth’s” is the title of the picture. It deals with the experiences of a clerk in a ten-cent store, who aspires to crash the night clubs as an entertainer. The complication* that •naue when she doe.- so, and her love affairs with subway guard, make up an entertaining story of modern youth. Miss White will be seen as the tencent store clerk, and Charles Delaney, th'- young Irish actor, who played with the same .star in “Show Girl’ and “Broadway Babies”, portrays the
Brim-
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Don’t deny yourself the luxury of
Qamels
<£) 1930, K Reynolds Tobacco < ompauy, V. uutwu baUm. N. C.
