The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 June 1930 — Page 3

fHEDATLV BANNER,GHEENCAOTEE, INDIANA MONDAY. JUNE23,1030.

CLASSIFIED

—For Sail*— for SALE:—One Dicky bird tcn^, . e double ?izo folding camp cot and i attres-S 2 chairs, 2 burner gasoline mp ■ ,tove ' * 30- 1927 Ruic,c coat ' h Pbone 475-L. 23-3ts. o, FOR SALE:—Offered at a bargain c lo°e estate. Residence property of , ] a te Mary Hoover, 305 Elm street. , g r Savers at Central Trust Co. 1 St-d.

pOK SALE—5-room cottage, good ation, price right. R. W. Shafer, hone 57408. 23-1-p.

On Auto*, Purnlture, Plano*, Kadlos, Uve 8tool:, j;to. K«- ’ pay \\*ekl>- or Monthly. INDIANA LOAN CO. 24.1 ‘Washington y t I‘hone 15 *

>1-.N til i HOBS PACT | tioas as follows^ from Chesterton to stopped for a traffic licht, another exhaustive study and consideration jects mdertaken bj 1 te atete U ASH I N(i I ON, dune 23 (L'P)— the Michigan Ce.ntra railroad cross- man met them l.-Aer and ifter blind- the qualification- of seventy coaeln j highway department i.s be.ing'pushed

i he I OlnIon Naval treaty' moved a log south of Miohyran City, fi:10 miles; folding him he was taken through sev who were app!: nts for the job. forward step nearer ratification today when 1 , from that crossii#? to the Nickle Plate mal i.we.-. uicrdiiv t,. the story. Newman Mimed a one-year on- Paoli and

th • Senate horeign Relations com-, crossing, 5.5 milctp; and from then to Police ar - , anhing for tIp men and : Iract and in litatn to coaching ha • •, Tell i ity according ' initu-e voted a favorable report on the Michigan statlp line, 3 miles. All Voder has attempted to top pay kethall and track will teach histm . the department.

state road 37 between point 12 miles north of

to officials of

The vote was Ifi to ' of the route will be made 40 feet wide, ment on the certificate

4 for the treaty.

Today’s vote ended a six-weeks fight by a handful of committee op pwienls who sought to forestall favor-

When completed, the road will he approximately one mile south of the present highway. It will be routed south of .Michigan City and plans call

"(I HOST TOWN'

1,1 ' ' 1 ‘ The project includes super-elevat-

ing 125 curves and construction of

“THUMM-RIDERS” R VN'Ni l» water bound macadam and treated PITTSBCRG, June 21 (UP) Far surface. When, completed this fall, I tory girls who ' thumb automobile i d wil1 provide a dustless surfaee he-

“ ^'^Ia • njmjr J-.rn. ,

Purcell as waste, reveal that at once car for Oiiector of Public Safety time there was a postoffice at Spring-1 Clark has issued orders to end thr icM"of aJy road-in ti, world,"ix^d. ; H . end 5 ick ; ' ' ' 1 ^

ed only by that of the Roaton

road.

time to await the extra session at; According to William Titus, chief wliieh it will be considered. j highway department engineer traffic

on the Dunes highway is second heav-

vt,-,. • or via Hl -o'mington, Paoli and Tell City. The last 12 miles of the rou’e

already mV oil treated.

SIO.IHM) Damage

Sail Yenned Here

FOR SALE—Ninety-three Park rain Barred Rock Pullets weighing nm three to four pounds.—See r.i || Teresa Hetrick, jdione 026-Y, or j South Jackson street. lll-4t.

Additional Ixicals

Dr. R. J. (lillo.spic wn- in Indiana-

polis Monday,

1 0 - ~ | Hugh Thatcher of Indianapolis vi. For RWIf' I a visitor here Monday.- ——— j Peter Taffola, who was injured in

FOP. RENT.—a room cottage with ' llu ' Greyhound bus accident, was aid

rage.—R. W. Shafer, Phone 57-468.

23-1-p

RENT—4-room cottage, ea-l street, semi-modnrn.— Fred dwin. 21-St.

FOR RENT:—Furnished apartment July and August well located. ;#ne 594-X. ' 21 -3p.

jjpE RENT or SALE— Strictly dem 6 room house. Steam heat. 288 or S. C. Buyers at 91. W. Beemer. 21-3t. -o JOR RENT:—A nicely furnished wn stairs apartment, well located h large yard and garage. Light and ter furnished. Phone 245-1., 21-5t

to leave the Putnam County haspita* for his home in St. Louis today. Ballard Burns and Jesse Dickens, penal farm escapes, were taken to thr slate reformatory at ePndleion, .Sunday by Sheriff Edward Eiteljorge to

seive 1 to 5 years.

Mr. and Mrs. John Haspel who have been visiting their daughter Mrs. Ralph Johnston and Mr. Johnston in 1 Montezuma the past two weeks ie-

turned home Sunday.

Mayor W. L. Denman i« in Craw, ford ville this week attending a national meeting of the Supreme Tribe of ILn Hur, of which he is a mem''< r of the supreme executive committe*.

FOR RENT:—Four Room dem house and garage on rry St. See A. J. Duff.

—Wanted— WANTED:— Young calf, ral 16.

A ANTED: - City garbage, Call l)r. James’ Office.

Sixteen Given Special Awards

OUTSTANDING WORK l\ SI I IES AT D’PAI M MERITS HECTOR S< HOI. WISH I PS

PLAINT1EK Al l KGES MALICIOUS RtyOSKTl Hon IN COMPLAINT FILED IN LOCAL COI’KT

-MiflcellaneouO’ ODaK Finishing—Yelox icej—Cam mack Studio.

Sixteen Del’auw Univeisby stud

I hone received special Rector scholar- “ ship awards for outstanding scholas-

tic work during the school year which closed June 9. Nine freshm u men re. ceived scholarships for the romainde} ot their college course for having made fifty points or more during the

Able garbage hauled free, ashes, 1 year. They are: and light hauling of at! kinds atj Robert Dorste, Anderson; Robert J. ?«nable prices. Phone 333-K. j Parvin, Jr., Kokomo; Loien B. Pope, 23-fiis. Falls Church, Va.; Charles Smith,

Kenilworth, Hl.jFrank and John Steinmetz, brothers, Indianapolis; Jainet Stoops, Greencastle; Walter H. Uhjig, Northamption, Mass.; and Thomas B White, Evanston, III. This award goes to all freshmen men who are not already Rector scholars. Wilbur Oesterling, Glenn Ellyn, HI. received a scholarship his first semester for

making 45 points.

A scholarship is also awarded each year to the person who stands highest in each class regardless of sex Frank Hardee Allen, Hobart a senioi and a Rector scholar, wgs first in the graduating class with 112 points foi his senior year. He received a cash award of $100. Charles Wayne Shumaker of Indianapolis, a junior and a Rector scholar, made 117 jtoints and

LEAVE FOR PRISON

ERRE HAUTE, June 23 (UP)— rteen men were started from here enroute to the Federal Prison Lea .enworth, Kan., where they will ve terms ranging from one yeut one day to two years, imposed up them by Judge Robert C. Baltzell federal court here last week. The men were sentenced a.-, a ret of their conviction on charge.- of ns pi racy to violate the federal prohition laws. They were indicted a federal grand jury in Indianapoon a charge that they operated gigantic liquor ring of 38 still- in Jrrmillion and Vigo counties. Twelve of the 46 men named in indietment, including Joe Tramn,

leged leader of the ring, and Edna received a cash award of $100. I’llara, Traum’s lieutenant, have not • | n the sophomore class two wen

tried, either having forfeited ii e d for the award,

Damages of 10,000 arc sought hy Charles E. Young in a complaint chaiging malicious prosecution, filed in the Putnam circuit court against Samuel W. McPheeters. The case was vemnd heie from Hendricks county. The plaintiff alleges that false and malicious information given by the defendant resulted in a charge of lure ny being filed May 2s, 1928, against him, and that as a result he spent a total of eighteen days in jail, was injured in reputation, incurred unnecessary expense in preparing a d Tense and -offered humiliation and disgrace. It is aleged tin- charge was never pushed and that on September 11, 1028, it was dismis-ed without him ever being arraigned on the charge. Young is his own attorney in the case. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Roth, Greencastle R. 7, are attending the state encampment of the Spanish-American War veteran- at LaPorto. Mr. Roth is a delegate from the local camp.

, . The woorV represent- an investment

Post' 10 ™-' No lrm ’ P of th< * lown rH Pittsburgh Moto. Gub which contend-, of Rhout 7 - i00()> ll|Mi p rovi , lo ., oni . l mains today. | ed the “hitchhikers” were delavmg ploymont f or a |, out ;W o men, accord-

OtbOT projects in the lett- 1

• - 4* Coffin from a town m l.»wn, nv a mp are.* One mile of construction on v , niece, who signed Nell Wntten ,n V((N|1VVS , lVF HRST b AIM „

the language of the Quakers, a sent .

r 4ii44 i r lv\ I l KhS ence from thi* letter saui: , _ , r „. Iir , • 4U i 44 t i • (Cent. Stand. I line—Ur) “We receive thy letter a few dayp,,.,,,, v . n/t , .. .

ago, which we had been looking for

for the last month or two.” I n _ u

, | \\ AB( ( BS Net i:30 pm—Evange.hn,-,

Adams with spaciou.- valleys and wootied

U. 8. 81 and Road 56 near aqd in Scottsburg; U. S. 24 , 0 between Fort W.-.yne and New Haven, 4 miles; Road 15 between Warsaw and Milford, three-fourths of a niile; and on Road 62 from Hatfield to the War-

rick county line, 2 1-2 miles.

nut to J(*hn J. Brown, director of the

! commission.

The iiresent road 37 i.- replete with

dangerous curves after leaving Pnoli, I and t jc project under way will make it u.iiptalde tu high speed modern

traffic, Brown pointed out. The highway traverses a high raise

TELLS WEIRD STORY

EI.KHARU Ind., Jane 23 (UP)

NEW LEBANON < ()\< H

Selection of Paul W. Newman, for mer Purdue athlete and for the past

four years basketball scout for Ward , ard E. Byrd.

Abducted for a day, driven over the i (Piggy) Lambert’s Boilermaker five, WEAK NBC Net 7:3(1 pm -('unetal northern part of Indiana, and forced as basketball and track coach at Lob Motors Hour,

to give a certificate of deposit for $5. 1 anon high school, was am uneed Eri

726.18, was ghe story Emanuel ('. | day by Paul Van Riper, -uperinten- V MARVELOUS EEVI Yoder told poftioe a few days ago. | dent of l.dianon school I'he school INDIANAPOLIS, June 33 (I P Two men envexed his car when he j board made the selectioi only aftei Oni of the most d fficult road pro

WEAK NBC Net (i 30 pm \. & P. jnill- slietching oit either side. Huge

Gypsies. ' rock cliffs were cut to a dept of

WAB< CBS Net 7 pm Admiral Rich- manj feiu, valleys crossed by great

fills and hridg*--. Out-state engin- < r and federal government authorities who have viewed these sections

between Maititi-vilh- and Bloomingj ton and thence to Bedford, say it 1* I on,- uf the gneatest engineering feats i in the country.

William Elbert

Whipple of Freensburg and Miss Mary Downey Shaw of Kimball, West Virginia. Each had 108 points. Mist Shaw received a scholarship for thr remainder of her college course and Mr. Whipple, being a Rector scholar received $100. James Handley Link ol Scranton, Penn., was the highest freshman with 102 points. He .was a Rector scholar also, and received

$1(8)

By special dispensation, Anne Nichols and Martha Vaughn of GreencastU outstanding fieshmon women students received a scholarship for theii next three years for having made 10(1 „ points, twice the number required ol

fcOTIUE OF QUALIFICATION HI ^ fo( . the award . «ivo», ii... h O'" * f"’" ft.'.fJr.JTt'

tirjersigned has duly qualified as been awarded to high school gradualExecutor of the laist will and tc-iu f>s y e ar and these will enroll next

ir.ent nrf Jo^ffiiine Townsend, de | ^ Umber as freshmen ceased, in the Rutnam Circuit (.ourt,| 0

of Putnam County, Indiana, and has

rmd or not yet hem apprehended. Ir. R. C. King Tells a Wonderful Story About Rats. Read It [ “For months my place wa- alive [with rats. Losing chickens, egg 1 , ed. Friends told me to try RATVnAP. 1 did. Somewhat disappointed )t ‘ir-t, not seeing many deud rat', )ut in a few days, didn’t see a live ine. What were not killed arc not Round my place. RAT-SNAP suie Joe,- the trick.” Three sizes, 35c. 65c, 11.25. Sold and guaranteed hy Mid-

ins Drug Store.

'Mi duly authorized by said Court

to administer grid estate.

S^id estate, is supposed to lie sol-

tent.

June 16, F080. FLOSSIE TO WIDEN'D, Executor _;i'hfo(lpVe Craw|e>, Attorney^_l64ts NOTICE OF VlSZrsWTL^IKrr M ESTATE

SI SPWT SOUGHT

CHICAGO, June 23 (UP)— The combined ngencies of law enforcement hunted a suHpcct today in th< assassination of Alfred J. Linele, Chica«o Tribune reporter, on trials that led toward the powerful liquo. gang of George “Bugs" Moran and Joe Aiello, two of the "Big Four in

Ohioajfo rackattertW*

The suspect hunted was James

henceman of the

VHN< ASTLE Ut’s Go Clara Bow! Those who snapped up the entertainment treat the “IT” girl offered at the Vnnra-tle thi at re last night had an hilurioii 1 eveippy. Slic is thcr 1 again tonight znd Tu. day and for a jojful go-sl time, go Bow! Clara lias more “IT” than -he ever showed before in “True to the Navy.” Surrounded by a dozen m more love-smit\ten navy gobs, she shows what i.- good for the male ego. None of the boys make any headway with the (“Kudhead” until Eredrir March, the same handsome hero who dole her heart in “The Wild Party,’ lands right. Then Clara gets a taste »f her own fickleness. “True to the Navy” would be a good story even without Clara Dow. With Clara flashing In i “It” smile, it s a dandy all-around enUrtaLumen'.. Harry Green, the funny man of Kidtzer” and “Honey,” t- a riot of laugh-making cracks and pantomime, ind the rest of the cast looks as it jught to. Clara, a soda-fountain girl in Harry Green’s drug store, makes “It” a dig business. All the .sailors from the battleships in the harbor flock to the drug store for ice cream soda-s ind a smile from Clarn. She plays hem all end collects the souvenir , ind says goodbye with a smile. She has a special boy-friend on every hip and manages to keep them separated until the whole fleet, and all her specials drop anchor at once. She is sunk. Then she meets Fredric March, a woman-killer gunner’s mate, ind marches to the altar with him over the prostrate forms of half a dozen other smitten swains. Clara’s singing voice is one of the big features of “True to the Navy.” She croons “There Is Only One Who Matters to Me” as nobody else could. It’s no wonder all the sailors believe her when she says it. Clara looks marvelous as she sings the number. She sings with her voice, with her eyes, with her whole body, with all her personality. And Clara Bow’s singing is all the more delightful be. •ause it is a surprise talent. Added to this bill is an all-talking larpino Lane Comedy, “Purely Circumstantial” and the Paramount Sound

News.

Notice is hereby given to the Creditors, Heirs and Legatees of Koena

Eelly, deceased, to appear in t o Forsythe henceman oi me I iutnam Circuit Court, held at Green Re . ^ branded a f »stU, Indiana, on the 22nd day of; northsjde gang ^ ^ e i rcuit September, J&30, and show cause, p | “potential mum alTegt ed last »!>>•» why, the FINAL SETTLEMENT Judge when he ^ Centra i j ACCOUNT* With the e.-tate of sail. year. Forsythes " h t wa , ‘Cedent hould not be approved; ', figure of the inv. .^ ^ h ^ the tRd saig heir* are notified to then | aroused Chicago t b „ the • nd there make proof of heirship, l:*t two weeks, * * fjes dr ‘i v i n g

and receive their distidbutive shares. ( "Ch aring Hou.-* Witness, the Clerk of said Court, into the murder.

I lll i* 17th day of June, 1930.

F'erd Lucas, Clerk Putnam Circuit

f n »>rt.

M- Sutherlin, Attorney. . !7-«t.

THIS WEFJUS WEATHER Period of showers about Tuesday and again Thursday or Friday; sea

sonnhly warm.

BIDS OPENED INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. June 23 (UP —Bide on construction of a Dunes relief highway to parallel the present road No. 20 will b<' among those opened tomorrow by the state highway commission at the statehouse. F'ive separate projects are included in the letting and total cost is estimated approximately $1,250,000. The new northern highways which is planned to relieve traffic on the heavily congested Dunes highway, will extend from Gary to the Miohi-gan-Indiana state line and Chesterton will be included in Tuesday’s letting however. This will be divided into three sec-

Jaoy ,„ a „

"Coming events cast their shadows before

AVOID THAT FUTURE SHADOW* fty refraining from over-indul-gance. If you would maintain lha modern figure of fashion Women who prize the modern figure with itssubtie,seductive curves—o^utA'Iio would keep that trim, proper form, eat healthfully but not immoderately. Banish excessiveness—eliminate abuses. Be moderate—be moderate in all things, even in smoking. W hen tempted to excess, when your eyes are bigger than your stomach, reach for a Lucky instead. Coming events cast their shadows before. Avoid that future shadow by avoiding over-indulgence if you would maintain the lithe, youthful, modern figure. Lucky Strike, the finest Cigarette a man ever smoked, made of the finest tobacco—The Cream of the Crop— "IT’S TOASTED." Everyone knows that heat purifies and so "TOASTING" not only removes impurities but adds to the flavor and improves the taste. “Its toasted” Your Throat Protection —against irritation —against cough. *B« Moderate! . . . Don’t jeopardize the modern form by drastic diets, harmful reducing girdles, fake reducing tablets or other quack “anti-fat” remedies condemned by the Medical profession! Millions of dollars each year are wasted on these ridiculous anti dangerous nostrums. Be Sensible! Be Moderate! We do not represent that smoking Lucky Strik® Cigarettes w ill bring modern figures or cause the reduction of flesh Wc do declare that when tcinpteTto do" yourself too well, if you will "Reach for a Lucky" instead, you will thus avoid over-indulgence iu things diat cause excess weight and, by avoiding over-indulgence, maintain a modern, giatchi! form. • TUNE IN —The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Saturday night, over a coast-to-coast network of the N- B-C. © 1930, The American Tuba co Co., Mir*.