The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 August 1930 — Page 3
1 f ' -I
the daily banner, oreencastle, Indiana. Saturday, ai t g. 2.1930.
$20 to $300 Qn Autot. V*um]tur«, nanoa, lUdloa, Uva Stock. Eta. Rap»7 V eakly or Monttaty. INDIANA IX)AN CO. <JI/| 1 • ■ Wa«hiniH«n St^ l*hon«* IT.
oBirrvRv
I knew th(*rp Is no error In the great Kteroal plan. . Anil all things work together For the final gooii of man, 1 know that the soul is aided .Sometimes by the heart’s unrest. And to grow means oft to 'offer. But whatever is—i best.
Administrator’s Sale OF Personal Properly
Forest, son of (Peter Houghland Me Vary, wa-
The undersigned, administrator ol the estate ol the late Emmer Wright, j deeeas'“d. nil) offer for sate at 1‘uhlif Auction, at the late residence of the
and Ella j deceased, in Madison towiiHhip, (i born iiti "rst of dree mast le. just west
Oreencustle township, December' 12,1 , * 1 '* < ’' < * * ' v,a, ' ,,n ' On the evening of July 28, 1980, 1 UCS., All£[. 5j 1930 I W,,P '' t, '“ tla >’ S la | ,0r Wa * almost 1 Beginni,,, a . 10 o'clock
(near the time Uie sun had set in ( \||
all its glory, tlie summons came to
this one, our neighbor and friend. syfr a C'C| L' , | L - * H A | He was called in the prime of life, !« I llIFjL" /\IJo jing 58 yivirs, 7 months and ir> da\s
of age.
—For ShI^ Jesus ^aid: “Watch ttierefore, for APPI.KS, III t'HHVIT OKCH \Bf).' ye know not on what day your Lord
— O ! eorneth,” and how trtle.
ICE CREAM ami home made cake., fro m th# Greenwill be sened at tce cream supper cnstle hI(rh , chool with hono given by fhnst.a.i Church Sunday J , 894 , n th(? faU of lg9fli h(i
School Saturday night on lawn' north of the church. Come. I-2t.
FOft SALE—One new bicycle cheap if sold at once.—Cook’s South End Store. Phone 184. -‘ifFOR SALE—Hienty of roasting ears.—J. Frank Collins, Hamrick Sta tion. 2-Pp
FOR SALE—Yearling S. C. White Leghorn hens. Purdue and Siuythe strain also March hatch. S. C. White Legiu •n pullets, Hollywooil Strains. Tressman Parker, Stilesville, Ind. 81-Cp. FOI: SALE:—Summer sweet apples and''frying chicken s McCullough’/. OrdUtro 1-tt. —For K<*nt— FOP RENT—4-room modem cottage^ good basement, 2 noith Locust strew. l-2p FOR RENT—Large clean airy room hot water eV’-ry day. 22 north Locust street. 1-2-p
hGTt RENT:— Furnished apartments., Phone .'92-X or f>57. l-2t. FOR RENT - 7-room house on East Seminary street. Phone Nell Leachman, 7dl-L. l-2ts.
FOR RENT—5-room modern house. Phone 417-K. 80-31a
FOR RENT Good Phone 529 Y.
8-room house. 25-tf.
FOR RENT—Downstairs furnished, modern light housekeeping rooms and garstge, close in. Phone 35-L.—20fl W’est Franklin. 20-4-p.
FOR RENT:—2 or 8 rooms for light housekeeping, flood location. Light, water and heat furnished. Ptione 246-L. i-8t. —Wanted— WANTED:—Elodrly lady in home of three, two young daughters and father. Work will be light. J. E. Strothd . Phono 713-X. 2-2p.
Ladies wanted to do sewing ut home, experience unnecessary, Sond addressed envelo|ie for particulars. Frank Werner, 70 North AJburtis Awme, Corona, Long Island. 2-lp
Sell personal Christmas cards. NamM Bmboaseii in icold. #1. dozen up. ■Hu d comnii.-sion. Samples free. ^^Ke bo\ assortments. Dunbar Co.. ^^BN. Laselle, Columbus, Ohio. ' 2 "" 1—MisceOaneoni— SURE and come to the Ice 3^" Supper Saturday night on a .rill of the I'lni-tian e 11 - l-2t.
|DI \.N \ MEN LET AWARDS V'lP KNOX, Ky., Aug. 2 (UP)— men receiving awards at the military training camp here Hamid E. Harvey, Columbia best in citizenship, and three ■ Indianapolis, Don Moschenross, ^lal efficiency; Herman O. Camfnnd Donald Whitcomb, neatnosi rmilitary bearing.
RECEIVES OLD LETTER editor of The Banner waa tjed a letter by the writer, in per on Wednesday, and it was just ears being delivered. The letwas written to 8. R. Kariden by rt H. NVwgent on September 15, from Ply-mouth, England. Mr. gent forgot to mail the letter on Wednesday wjille gpjng gh some of his old war time s, ran across the parcel and <te-
ired it in person,
it the time Mr. Newgent wrote the r, hr was in the United States
in
on-
Itred ufiiversity to sttuly electrical Engineering, but owing to the seriou ■ condition of his eye', he had to give up this work. The year prior to his marriage, he owned a .-tore in CoatesviHe, but sold it in the spring of 1898. His marriage to Maude Hurst occurred 82 years ago last April 27. To this union was bom two sons— Harold, county agent of Pulaski Co., Indiana, and Marion, engineer with the Belle Telephone Co., of Indianapolis. He was a just and kind father, hi.s wise counsel will go with them thru life. They were married on the farm that was to be their future home, where they have lived all these years of married Hfd. Though his plans were somewhat changed when a young man, he al ways looked on the bright side of life. This poem, “Kis.-ing the Rod”, by James Whitcomb Riley, was a great JlaMoV^t! '|f hity quotations from which he often gave his family and friends as a foundation for a-happy life. O heart of mine, we shouldn’t Worry so! What we’ve mi«wed of calm we couldn’t have, you know. What, we've met of stormy pain. And of sorrow’s driving rakr. We can better meet again, If it blow. We have erred in that dark hour We have known. When our tears fall with the sbow.-r All alone! Were not shine and shower blent As the gracious Master meant? Let us temper our content, With His own. For, we know, not every morrow Can be sad; So, forgetting all the sorrow We have had, Let us fold away our fears And put by our foolish tears, And through ail the coming years, Just be glad. He taught school for 14 years in the township in which lie lived. He not only taught boks but also knowledge of God to tie found in all nature. After teaching school, he became a farmer, enjoyed God’s great outdoors. He was deply interested in farm Feduratlion,—had implicit faith in Farm Organization. One of the e sons has said, ‘‘Father waa deeply interested in, everything that was for the betterment of a community.” He was a man, of whom we could say, had for 1(1« life's motto,— Others. He joined the Christian church in Fillmore when just passed the age of 15 years, under the teaching of the Rev. W. H. Brown. He has ever been tiue to that promise, he made in faith, in hv- youth, to his God. His life was emblematic of Christ, wiio stood on life’s holiest pinnacles here and declared that the righteous lor ever live in hle'sedness, service and adoration. Hi* life will be a sacred memory to this beloved wife pi living example of a Christian life to thorn- sons, a cherished remembrance of a happy pure life to Helen, his daughter-in-law and little Doris Anne, his only grandchild. Beside these, his immediate family, he leaver one brother, Fred, and two lu^phew-s, of I^afaydtte; ami other relatives and friends. Father, mother and an infant sister, have preceded him in death. He i:, not dead to us; he cannot die, His memory with our own being blent; Although ascended to the loftiest sky, His .soul with ours has still eommunion lent.
IHI n |<>(»\ \| I’Kttl’Fli 1 Y '•I I HE DEC EDEN 1
< Misisting <d
•’i head work mules, 2 Jersey cows,
56 hens.
1 ARMINE I Ml’t.EM ENTS Consisting <u Studehaker wagon,
binder, disk harrow, hay lork. hay fruim-, three cultivators three -els work harness, log chains, and mam other farming implements too nutnerou.s to mention. HOUSEHOLD GOODS Carpets, stmes, sewing machine, Hock, chairs, hetls. sofa, and many oth<r household articles including complete household and kitchen furniture. GROWINt. ( HOPS VII the growing corn on the Wright fnrni in Madison township. | Eli MS — t W« Jacob J. Kauble \d minis! rat or THEODORE ( It VW LI V, Mty. C. A. VESTAL, Xurtionecr. OLA ELLIS, Clerk The Ladies Aid of Bethel ( hnreh will serve dinner.
“LUCKY COIN” DISAPPEARS
RICHMOND, Aug., I (UP)—When a gypsy dropped a "lucky coin" into the pocket of W. F. Nichols, Phila delphia, a ?40 roll of bills disappeared he told police recently. He had stopped outside the city, he said, when the gypsy stopped up to hi ear and offered him a luck piece. He openetl his purse and she dropped in the coin. Upon arriving in the city he fount) his money was missmg-
INDIANA’S DARKFM D\Y
MARTINSVILLE, Aug. 1 (UP)— Indiana’s darkest day, which occurred sixty-three years ago this week, irecalled by H. W. Brown, aged re«ident. Total eclipse of the sun turned day into night—for 80 minute-.
COMMISSIONERS ALLOWANCES
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our smeem
n*jry, being stationed on the Panther, appreciation to the many naighbars w * rh lntor w »* shipwreckad off th% Mkd filttedl the family who have been «**t. of France. The letter carried »o kind and sympathetic during our a'number of pictures of street ;|idden bwdavwndnft fin the death ••lymouth and recalled many 1«, of our huebaml a«d fatho*. events that took place dut*! Mrs. Forest McNbry mg (hose days following the r tns». of O. H. McNary and Family. ^K Wa ' M. W. McNary.
Floyd McCullough, depend. Mrs. Ray Bell Mrs. Curtis Lawrence Inna PitU Cora Whittaker Mahala O’Daniel May Williams Milton Brown Goldie O’Neal Mary Robertson Maggie Watson Dooma York Louise Watkins Amos Nicholson Raymond McGaughey Ind. State Sanit. The Banner, pub. print. The Herald Oscar Sallust road Jno. Crawley Milo West Jno. Uightsell, Co. Fair Ind. Com. Road The Herald Alva Bryan Tlie Banner Guy Jackson, county farm Mary Jackson Glen Clark Silas Do we Hand! Nichols H. Fitzsimmons Alta Mills Francis Byrd Berry Stellc E. I„ Cowgill Fr»d S. Todd Owl Drug Co. Browning Hammond W. H. Eitelorge Put itie** Bakeries White Mule Prod. Co. Guy Jackson Scobee Bros. Campbell Bros. High Point Oil Co. Star Store C. B.’ O’Brien R. S. Cow-gill E. C. Dimmit Ferd Luraa, sal., etc. T. R. Wodburn, o. exp. Miller Bryant Co. The Herald W. E. Gill, nal. Houtroughs Add. Mach. Co. Katherine Miller, dept. aud. G. E. Ogles, sal. Leona VanGorder Ed. Eiteljorge, sal. Ed. Eiteljorge, board Ed. Eiteljorge, mileage 0. O. O’Neal Browning Hammond, exp. J. C. Vermillion Eliaabath Pagett, dept. Chas. A. Marshall Tlte Herald
80.00 80.00 20.00 20.00 20.00 18.00 16.00 12.00 12.00 12.00 12.00 15.00 15.00 1040 12.50 285.70 77.45 7840
00
3.00 fi.sn 400.00 11.25 1148 5.10 26.47 75.00 25.00 16.00 18.7f. 6.00 8.00 40.00 40.00 40.00 TIM 5.75 3.85 .'7.0n 7.80 83.03 37.50 8.30 12.4'l 13.75 11.10 15.88 39.00 40.15 8.75 183.33 10.01 9.00 8.20 25C.O0 7.20 62.50 200.00
35.60
6.30 273.<M 3tf50 11 AIK) .50
R. M. Hurst, health e-q,.
56.06 1
Geo. Aker, council
10.60
Cha.', McFerren
10.00
Jno. Sinclair
20.00 1
H. C. Foster
20.00 r
W B. Bridges
20.00 f
Roy Hillls
20.00
H. C. Morrison
20.00 1 c
I’- D. Brokshire
10.00 1
• s! - A. Vermillion
86.66 f
K K. Cooper, asse«-itig
66.00 1
Joe Shumaker
44 00 *
H. R. Woodall
100.00
Malissa Epperson, poor, Jack
8.60 '
c C. Collin,-
48.50 <
A. M. Keck
29.68
C. l!. Jarvis
10.83 1
M. Keck, Frank.
10.00 |
D. IV. Bain, Ru'scH
20.07 |
Edward & Darnall, Monro.-
:.6.2.'.
Cat! Elliott, Floyd
3.0U
J- L. Ettcr, Oreencastle
25.28!
Curry Inman
20.00
C. A. Kelly
18.69
C. R. O’Rrien
72.60 ,
■Ino. A. Agan
l20.0i'
Etta Gardner
18.25
VV. R. Ventres.'
16.19
T. F. Crawford
16.00 |
Vandalia Coal Co.
21.00
Ptunam Co. Hosp.
114.50
J. E. McCurry
90.00
Put. Co. Hosp., Marion
75.50
W . M. McGaughey, Mad.
129.50
Put. County Hospital
68.00
( l. A. Sweet, Jefferson
90.00
i E. M. Hurst, Cloverdale
18.00
Clyde Gray
48.50
'c. C. Tucker
10.00
f*. 0. Tate, Monroe
40.49
I’nul Giimea, Greenca'tle
24.00
J C. C. Tucker
86.50
j D. McAnnineh, Marion
22.35
D. McAnnineh, Jefferson
28.67
C. F. Matthews, court hou-e
25.50
Daisy McFarland
18,00
J. R. Davis
100.88
C. \V. i’fienberger
106.83
Browning A Hammond
1.05
Kigc-r Co.
28.5.1
R. C. Moore
8.30
GreenUastle (!as Co.
5.65
Gtvencastle Water Works
85.65
H. L. Jackson
5.25
J. A. Agan, jail
7.00
Wabash Vak Elec. Co.
,54.75
Elizabeth Pagett, cov. testing
9.0o
Harold Flint
15.00
R. J. Johns
12.00
E'ton Cooper
6.00
J. R. Sallust
3.00
Volnie Raah
6.00
Roscoe Surber
9.60
Henry Woodall
3.00
Ray Stockwell
6.00
Verne Silvey
12.00
Fred Kendall
3.00
B. A. Miller
80.97
F. B. Smithson
73.70
Geo. W. Hamilton
79.45
C. A. Martin
94.46
C. E. Cull
51.08
T. W. Lingenfelter
102.64
C C. Keller
86.27
T. A. Sigler
16.43
L. A. Kay
39.55
E. E. Coshow
75.55
Citizens Trust < ■ , bond
12.50
W. Miller, road oon'tr.
62.50
Allan Lumber Co.
11.82
Dennis Matthew
15.60
County Rev. r*-i d
358.60
E. Wallace
20.00
Stringer & Md immack
1857.00
W. E. Gill
35.00
Sweet & Writ'lc
17586.80
Frank Allan
121840
i<aac Skelton
2000.000
W. E. Gill
7(5.00
Brazil Daily Tnii' s
87.92
Sweet A Wrigtll
3575.20
J. N. Washburn
40.00
Phillip Hutcheson
0.00
S. A. Hu n't
26.00
A. H. Clark
852.00
W. L. Baldwin
50.00
A. G. Day
448.80
G. P. Walker
210.00
C. C. Gillen
175.00
Harry R. Diel
15.55
Fred Hansell, grav. road
63.00
Lee Myers
220.15
J. J. Johnson
14.00
W. Q. O’Neal
48.52
Thomas Williams
556.50
iaiyman Hepler
432.27
Grany Allen
132.70
Levi Williamson
90.25
J. C. McFerran
56.20
H. Hale
19.40
Hugh Rurdett
40.00
Chas. F. Allen
17.10
Harry Grantham
373.35
Jesse Rutherlin
23.45
Arthur Egg,c
79.50
A. J. Johnson
550.06
Verner Houck, grav. road
65/81
C. B. Knauer
27.00
Albert Houck
299.25
Thos. Roach .
40.30
B. D. Wright
129.45
Alfred Copper
220.80
Heibert Fitzsiir.morw,
52.80
E. B. Wright
44.60
C. McCammack
25.10
T. E. Bond
59.09
H. Shake
54.45
C. M. Furr
146.71
C. C. Craft
74.45
Earl Barnet, grav. road
67.50
Standard Oil Co.
10.51
Franklin Street Garage
17.89
Fred Ellis
3.00
Ohio A- Indiana Stone Ci>.
3.75
G. P. Walker
235.45
Clint Whittaker
223.17
Geo. Walace
9.P0 |
Forest W. Clark
29.00
Bainbridge Saw Mill Co.
107.16
Browning Hammond Co.
21.21
Scobee Brea.
79.45
H. F. Shoptaugh
68.00
Allan Lumber Co.
34.35
Ellis * Co.
364.60
W. E. GILL, County Auditor.
NOT ACCIDENTAL
CHICAGO, Aug. 2 (UP)—Death in te electric chair is not "accidental”, ccording to a new ruling handed awn by federal Judge Woodward. fhc decision was given in the case 7 Mr. and Mrs. Jo t ph Diamond,
44 fm lilted several years tn-o at the Mich!-;
Judge Woodward ruled against, the mplainants. who charged young Diamond was "Put to death by en-
MERCHANTS GEl \ i*ER CENT | T“T 1 INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. j (UP) - 'wenty-six cents of every dollar ex-! pended by tourists in the United s goes directly to a merchant according to figures published today i by the Hoosier Motor club and the i American Automobile Association. Restaurants and cafes receive 20' ( cents; hotels, and rooming houses co|-:l 17.8 cents; auto accessories am'! j gasoline dealers U'-' cents; and tte remainder is expended on theaters and | amusements, railway transportation, j
and incidentals.
Of more than $4,000,000,000 spent ; by the nation’s motor tourist cara- | van each year, more than $1,000,000 j goes into tills of merchants and shop- ] keeper',’’ the report said.
WOULD RESCIND ORPIN \N( K PLYMOUTH, Ind., Aug 2 (UP) — City Attorney H. B. Orr has been instructed by the city council to commence a fight against an order of the public service commission of Indiana rescinding an ordinance of the council on protection at two railroad crossings. The commission rescinded an ordinance that fla'her signals at a point | crossed by the railroad be removed ! and 24-hour flagmen establish' d. Orr declared the ( oinmission acted | beyond its authority and charg' d i that the city had n< opportunity •*• be represented at a hearing © FIVE EVENTS IN FIRST R u E FORT WAYNE, A (UP) | ... first race at Fort Wayne' new S225,OtM) speedway and exposition grounds has been announced for Aug. 10. Five events are on the program for the day. Twenty-five drive ' have entered for the race among whom are the fol-
lowing:
Ira Hall, Terre Haute, Vuipre Rose, Dayton, O.; Boh Carey, \i .lesson; Dutch Bauman, Indiaiuipoli-; Gus Schrader, Cedar Rapids, la.; Al Miller, Detroit; and Albert Burrell, Columbus, ().
(Ol.. LINDBERGH ”<>V’ UK NEW YORK. Aug. 1 <UP> —Extensive networks of both the National Broadcasting Company and the Columbia Broadcasting System will early tbe voice of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh a week from today to the radio audience of the United States, and numerous short wave tian.-tmiUers take it across the world. Colonel Lindliergh will advocate calling of an international aviation conference by the League of Nations. The program will begin at 11 p. m., EDT and continue for 15 minutes.
&^EWS
UlM \STI.E
LOCAL CROW PS AW AIT OPEN ING Ol COMEDY HIT "THE Cl CKOOS”
Filled with delirious fun and hilar- ' ions nonsense, "The Cuckoos” Radio | Pictures’ wild riot of wagery, open Sunday Matinee at the Voncs.-tle The ' atre and continues thru Monday anti Monday night. The show bring' to the talkng j screen something new iin entertain- |
inent.
“The Cuckoos" is not a revue. It’s not a musical comedy, although comedy and nntsii hold full sway thru the production. The show is a distinct departuie from the conventional, offering a well-knit story which serves as a background for the an tics of the maddest pair of comics ever to grace the screen—Bert Wheel er and Rols-rt Woolsey, who won pic turn fame in "Rio Rita.” Romance lias not lieen neglected,, and a tender love strain Is carried | by J title, Clyde and Hugh Trevor. Wheeler and Woolsey are capably aided in their lunacy by Dorothy Fee and Johyna Howland. Ivan Lebedeff ami Mitchell Lewis an* the ‘‘bad j men” and Margnerita Padula lends ! her glorious voice to a number of j song hits. F ilmed partly in Techni^dor, of- i feting ten lilting hit song*, number , mg more than a thousand in its cast and containing the liveliest ret of chorus presentations ever brought to tlie screen, “The Cuckooe” is said to have everything that makes for perfect screen entertainment. Judging by its record-breaking re-
The Talking Picture Storv of “Caught short" Starring M \R!R DRESRLEU POLLY MORAN Bused on Metro-Gold* vn-Maver’-"< ,1,1 Slioi-t.’' written by Willard M.nk a cosmopolitan piuum <:i ion
■ -*5 4 ' -4
Mrs. Polly Smith, ex-boardlng house mistress, has Znade so much money In the,,stock market t'yat she ha. decided to take a trip to Atlantic/ City with her son, William, and her friendyy enemy, Mrs. Marie Jones, in -whose hoarding house she nov lives, and Mrs Jones's daiyghr'er, Jenny. * Maybe we can get our mothers to IMss andmake ut) for keeps In Atlantic Cltv Billy.’ Jehmy says. “We don't have lo cet our mothers to make up." William says, "but I don't think we could get 'em to kis> at the Blarney Stone under a full June moon.”
William and Jenny nor only fail to g t thetr mothers to' fall on eaoh other s neck at Atlantic City but tlpiy stop falling ou their own necks. ''William wanted to marry m> without your consent, inti," Jenny says "Well. 1 want you to be happy, so go ahead and marry him." signs Mrs Jones -"I'll marry noliody," Jenny nob' "Well, marrying a Smith i;- the same thin;;," eays Mrs Jones
ti Jones figured mat when a pretty girl is wearing them clo'hes may make a man. So she spt nt most of her savings on leutiy'a wardroliu and the rest ol It on a hotel suite in Atlantic City That's the v ay she fl lied for William for Jbdly Meanwhile, Mrs. Smith decided the best way for William to get J'tiny wa to make )u r Jealous "If Jenny should see you with that pretty little act re " Fanny Fee she might, change het mind—or get green or cross-eyed ' Mrs Smith
: r
Polly used to gel main urt-d every day so she could have someon * to talk to who wouldn't run out rn her. ’There’s an artblllou old fortune-hunter here who wants her daughter lo marry my son." she says. "Tell her your son U going to gel manied to someone else." says Hie manicurist, who has vellow hair and.doesn’t consider holding hand* with Mrs. Smith anything that . likely to lead to a breach of promise suit. .(To be continued )
ception in other cities, "The Cuckoo" is expected to attract capacity audience' during its showing here. Tonight George O’Brien in "Rough
Romance” will more than ii>rest mer/weather
Saturday patrons. It’s an atl-talkei photographed in the timbcrUnds and snowtgiund country and pre»*nt- cool and pleasant entertainment for inn-
