The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 December 1930 — Page 2
PAOETWO
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Fmiridf J on Security
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A REAL WELCOME AWAITS YOU
At this It.’iiik i"> in alter uhother >111 a cu - tomur or not- amt no niatli r « hi’ther you tome to deposit funds or withdraw Ihein. \\ <• are lien to servo you am' within tier e limits we shall aim to do all in our power to | ’ give you just thi ervice you need anti deuirt —for <» I ms I III \ 1 St tin ill \ li ANK
First National Bank The Oldest Bank In Putnam County Citizens Trust Co.
1 he Home Of The Systematic Saver
THE DAILY BANNER Entered in the Post Office at GrecnraHtle, Indiana, as second claaamall matter. Under the act ot March I,
1879.
Subscription price, 10 centj per
week.
PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS
Martha Kidpath Child I Study Group To Meet The Martha Kidpath Child Study Group will meet Friday at 2:S() p. in. Miss Miller, the county nurse, will be the speaker.
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Kev. and Mrs. Kendall
Guests Of Mr. and Mrs. Hash
M, Helen O’Dell has returned! Kev. and M.s, Benjamin KendaH of
in Chi- P en >, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
: K. K. Bash, south Indiana street.
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.Mi-, \itlmr J. Hamrick of Ihdl Girl Reserve vilte, omit tin day with- Mrs. W. D.' \|,. t >j on day
Timmons.
home alter visiting relatives
cago.
I In d Moo e lodge will meet thi ewni at -S o’clock. All nr inlicl's
be present.
Then will he a box supper at th' I’li 1 icipti t Church this evenitiK
The weekly meeting of the Girl Reserves was held Monday night. During the business meeting plans wore discussed for a Christmas patty for the residents of the county home. Another Christmas project has lieen the sending of a box of toys to fifty
We find that we have over-bought, both Folders & Frames To reduce stock we will give Special Kates Till Dec. 13 of Christmas I’hotos. Your Photograph is the only gift others cannot buy— The Caimnack Studio
Rayon Gift Pajamas Special $2.19 Tailored, all silk rayon pajamas with contrasting trimming. Rayon Rohes, $5.00 Smart rayon robes with contrasting color trimmings. Misses’ rayon pajamas, in gay colors. $1.98. THE QUALITY SHOP J. H. PJTCHFOKD
li. liiii iiapn I Young Peoples Union, children at the Indian rer-eivation at
Fort Hall, Idaho. .
Mi W \. Whitaker, who has been, rp^ p Qj r | f{ eKervos ; i rL . invited to vi-nUni' in < Inverdale for sevrial t j lp weekly meeting of the college Y. •'a.i , ha returned home.—Martin- vv. C. A. for Thursday afternoon. All ville Reporter. girls are requested to meet in front Th,- Sunday School Board of the M '« f thc hi >- rh ^h" 01 :,t 4:, 5 t( » I , Imrch will hold its meeting at 6 this meeting at which thc colored girl o’, lock thi evening in the community reserve secretary from Indianapolis »rch. will speak. A feature of the meeting was a Mliert Goff of Russellville was niost interesting talk on girls in inI |e i antly iurprised liy the members dustry, given iiy Hazel Hardacre, who , i l ie Kii- llville high school junior j s industrial secretary of the Detroit , la . and faculty with a surprise y. W. C. A.
by Marc Connelly was reviewed by Mrs. H. B. Gough. •t* Mrs. I Mercy Will Be Hostess To Section Two Section Two of thc Chri tian church will meet Thursday afternoon at 2:.">0 o'clock with Mis. Picrcy at the Theta Kappa Nu house, east Washington street. Mrs. Baney will I, the assistant hostess. Those wishing to may bring donations for the Union. Mrs. K. B. Evans Hostess
' There will he a rummage ale at the court house Saturday morning. 10-2ts
Virgil Blue of Belle I ni o uff< - d I a fractured liglit wi ! Wcdne-d iy I morning when he atteni|)ted t , crank
! a tractor.
(lie door to Die hank. As each employe arrived, he was warned to keep silent and was taken to the iear ( f the build in"-, tiler, to wait under guard until the bandits could get into the vault.
|,art> Tuesday evening at hi home.' Miss Mildred Pitchford met with [To Boston Club
Bernard Handy announced to- t,, ‘’ members of the dramatic group, The Boston club met Tuesday eve-
and distributed parts for a Christmas n ing with Mrs. E. B. Evans, West
play.
-I.
Section III To Assist Charily Section III of the Christian church will meet with Mrs. Philander 1’iuit
^Markets’ The Ladies Aid of Putnamville will
serve dinner at thc Courthouse Sal- INDIANAPOLIS LIVEST(K'K urday, Dec. 13. JO It. [ II recepit 8,000 hold vei 165; o ! generally 5c-15c lower; 160-225 lbs.
$8.30-$8.35; 225-300 lbs. mostly $8.25; 120-100 II,s $8.1.a-$8.25; lighter pigs $K.00; packing sow.- $7.00-$7.50; few
ROBBERS WORK EARLY
<la> Unit Handy's Banitary Dairy is now ,-quipped to churn its own creamon butler. This new product by Die local plant is churned from sweet, |,asi,iiii/.ed cream, making it tin* hi host grade butter that can be made. Tbl butler is churned under the ijinM nil I sanitary conditions and Mi Handy is rightfully proud of the branching out into this new line by
Ins dairy.
LETTERS TO SANTA
Walnut street. Sixteen members and , no guest, Miss McC y, were present. Mrs. William Bishop gave an interesting discussion on “Art and Pottery
of South America.”
During the social hour dainty re-
in Hanna Court Thursday at 1:30 freshments were served,
o’clock. Mis.< Barrow, Mrs. Gilbert!
Tate and Mrs. Walter Gardner will Dean Alvord Will Speak assist the hostess. Each member At \. I'. W. Luncheon
Fillmore, B. 2
KANSAS CITY, Mo.. Dec 10 (UP) „
! tp <. i u*
i Tile Interstate National bank was ,- at . recoipts ).000; calv. -receipt
ot ' ca8h tn i on all cla es; steer.Dear
four bandits who .„ mostly to -ll under $11; odd] I have tried to be a gfood girl.
|to remain quiet while tliej waited ro/- hpa(j ^,..,‘1;,^ jis.r.O;
j the time clock to icle-i e do,-i to m „ st |y $|oo-$6.00; me hellers; ,,f house slippers and some ; •I'*- vault when th« 1 oney wa kejd jft.00-$9.50; lightweights upward t» That will be all this time, j The four men $H; - With Love, I was pas- ing through th outei d -n. -1,011; N -(h-i-. -1, . c at sii.r.d ,fo« nM Maxine Dorsett
please bring food or clothing for charity help. *!* -J* -!• Delta Theta Circle will meet at the
!*j r '<^1
it Gnci? dm.'- not attain to the com- . # . . .
. . . . i percent of the whole ( lass, wine coni letc <*ll expression reached m the 4 - n . • .. . .. . , . 1 dltioued or tailed in one or mor.
laU 1 sonatas. While parts of it are
‘ courses.
not well written for the respective! ' . _ , .
' Jean deForest Gehrig and Fredci i,:
D, an Katharin? Alvord of DePauw university will be one of the speakers at a luncheon of the Indiana branch of the American Association of Uni-
f.of tin* bank 0 his way to work, ihev Sin-.qi receipt- tscinw; f fomsl him to admit them to tin bank 05,- inc.-r; good and choice larg lyj lobby, threatenin'.: him whli dvat^i|i/ )$^p)-$^.{M)l biwer gradfs $6.OOl$7.O0;
he made an outcry. common tlir-Vwouts down to $0.00 and ' lf! " , ' 1 " 1
, A guard was kept eom ■ tie I near U-. .
at 3 o’clock.
.;. .;.
Wil1 Mrs. Gill Hostess
beef , ov ,,|| pi, a bring me adoll and a pair -|- 0 |/ ra ( i,^ heifer : „f house slippers and some books.J Mrs w E Gi ,| wa8 hogtes8 t() th{ .
New Era C|ub Tuesday afternoon.
TnU SI Wilh T:... iWuaH I ^ an,pt ,H.-tmg
Dolta /.eta house, Thursday afternoon versity Women which will be held at
tlie Country Club inlndianapoiis Saturday. Tho Indianapolis branch will
bo hostess for the meeting.
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1
1 have tried to Ik.' a go,si girl. PI" , , bring me a doll and some I k and a pair of liousc slippers. Also em, candy and nuts and jfa'Mses mid 'tfenun;»0. * j;
..
paper on “Christmas Caiols,” T’his '"Ihelng annu'iT'ChrlelTn’as party, small
Fillmore, InJ,- were exchanged. Also a gif', to
'ini'k fund. A very happy afternoon wa- spent by twenty four members
and guests.
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Secion One To <
4 **
Meet On Thursday.
\N \N N0l NGE.Y1ENT
urs rpi
10 The LADIES
W ho Jiuy l.il (s lor Men.
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IcERim cofet IS SPEAKER AT DTUiW CHAPEL
.,. .;. .;. .j. .;. Friday Circle Will Meet With Mrs. Bernard Handy The ChrL-tmas meeting of the Friday Circle will be held at the homo of Mrs. Bernard Handy iu Northwooil, Friday afternoon. Mrs. Lee Reeves will have charge of the program. Each member is requested to bring a gift for the grab bag and party assessment.
/
i niJgTim m™. c 1 Sonala Recital
028 kalWv
INI I BESTING I M.K DELIVERED 11^ MEMBERS OF FOREIGN DEBATE TEAM , ounl Blumenthal, one of the Ger* in.,n univer.dty Indents that took |,;nt in the international debate wih tin Dt-I’auw university team Monday night, wa- tlie peaker in the univer
-ity ing.
chapel exercise.- Tuesday morn-
Jn selectiiiK giks for men llicrc are twoconsidcrat 10ns: I'irst.wliat tohuy! Secondly, where he’d buy his id ft if he were making the selection himself. The name CANNON on any man’s gift is an assurance t hat it represents the finest of quality andphe utmost in
style, and last, hut not least, IT’S FKOM A MAN’S STORF
I hen. loo, you will enjoy shopping hole where pleasant and painstaking salesuch will unhiiri’icdly help you in your selection and main* your Christ-
mas shopping a pleasure.
Hmidmls ,»| (;ilis Erom $1.00
To $1(1.011
mar
J. E. CAIN INI )l\ & CO.
i Count Blumenthal gave some of his inpi- i,,n ,if America received during In ; five weeks in this country. He t Id DePauw students that he had found only friendship, good will and hiispitality waiting for him when he arrived. There were many signs of rulture which European critics say
there i a lack of in America. Hi- experiences have shown him, unt Blumenthal said, that it is im-
l„i. thle to write a iwiok on America. When one goes abroad and stays four w ,-k and comes home, he or she usually writes two volumes of experenc, . If one stays two months in \merica the writing is confined to a few newspaper articles. If one stays longer, nothing is written for it is impossible to write a fair 1m,ok or crit
icism.
“War,” he said, “is the result of people from one country not undorlaii'ling the problems of another eountiy. The exchange of students and ideas will help much toward , h ating an understanding among nations. . “Germany,” he said, "is falling into communism as a way out of a horrible condition imposed by fhe treaty of Versailles. Germany is living and p.-ying off debts from American loans, he claimed Money borrowed from America by Germany is paid to Ft am - who uses pnrt of it to create an army and the rest to give ha, k to America for France’s war debts.” Count Blumenthal and his companion, Herbert Schuman, were guests of Scabbard and Blade Tuesday night at a funnel meeting of that nrgnnization in the lumilida Chi Alpha home.
wilt
iVulnut street, Tliiilstla.v af-
ternoon at S o'clock. Mjs. A. O. White will lead the devotions iu keeping with the won! ••Light. - ' Each member is requested to bring a ten cent exchange gift and a can of fruit or other food for charity. A
full attendance is desired.
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Morning Musicale To It, Held At 7:30 O’clock The Morning Musicale will meet Thursday evening at 7 30 o’clock at the home of Mrs. K. G. McCutehan, 608 Ridge Ave. Dean McCutehan will present a study of church music. This meeting will take the place of the usual Wednesday morning musical.
•h -I-
Rotary (Tub Members Mill Entertain With Xmas Party Members of the Kolitry dub will entertain their wive with a Christmas party at the Country (Tub W,-li-nes,lay evening. Dr. W I!. Hutcheson will show pictures of India. + * •!• + * Tuesday Beading Circle Met W ith Mrs. ( orw in The Tuesday Reading Circle held it., regular monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. B. F. Corwin. It was voted to contribute $5.00 to the milk fund and buj a health bond. “Gteen Pastures”
Given Tuesday
instruments, it does, however, embody Grieg' individual idiom to a certain
degree.
Chav, z’s “Sonatina” was more fully understood, if one may judge from tlie audience, than last year. There are -.ovelti, s which wear well, and there are those soon forgotten. The “Sonatina” after several hearings seems to take its place among the
former.
Brahms last violin sonata, difficult to play and somewhat taxing to follow, w;i- 1 isily the musical high light of the program. Music such as this requires several hearings, for in it the gn at north-German seems to be communing with himself, rather than to It,- c ating anything external in its impon. It is to be hoped that this great work of the mature Brahms may b- heatd again this year. in rc-pon-e to applause at the close of the program, the Chavez “Sonatina” wa; repeated. Professors Leach and Sheffield will play two more reel d this year, in which other modern and classical works will be heard. Dirks Announces Freshman Grades
BIG AI 1)1 l-'.M E HEARS PLEASING PROGRAM IN MEII\R BY HALL
The first Sonata recital of th" --ason was played last evening in Mr harry hall. As in the past, the good sized audience was highly apprecia live of the playing of Pn-fe-.-ors I/oaeh ami Sheffield. Both p iforumr deserve great credit for the titn,spent in prepating and playing work which are all too seldom heard even! in large cities. The recital began with Grieg's fir t ( violin tin,I piaro sonata, a work that probably belongs to that gioirp of.
Dean Dirks’ office ,t]j|i5 pvot'njng released stati. tics in regard to tho grade:; hi' fresnnlen men at tlie mid-s,*111,-ter. They revealed that the average gradq .of the men in that cla w is slightly above a C, ‘an average of 1.18 points. The 227 Rector scholars, however, bad ti higher rating than the|class as a whole, averaging 1.39 points, while the non Hectors fell far below, the 112 who do not have their tuition paid, averaging only 74 points. The eighty-four freshmen in the dormitories were the highest of the* four riasscs by residence. Their rating of Ml compared with one of 1.24 fm- the seventy-eight off campus men, I ol for the 161 fraternity house residents, and 1,03 for Greencaslle'a nineteen natives. Two hundred four men, 60 18 percent of Hie class, made fifteen or more p,unis, while 135. .”.9 82 percent,
M. Kriete made totals of forty tiv points, seven more men made from forty to forty-four points. Twenty one freshmen were above the tbiriy five point mark with twenty-six more in the range from thirty in thirty-five. Forty-eight had total btween twenty-five and twenty nin , while one less was between twenty and twenty-five. Fifty-three made from fifteen to nineteen points, while the same number were In the ten to fourteen list. Forty-one men made from five to nine points, and a lilc number had less than four. At the same tune, Dirks relea • ,1 the names of men who had more titan thirty-eight points. They were Jean deForest Gehrig and Frederic M, Kriete with forty-five each; Carl Vincent Confer, Lyman B. Terry, Fred VV. Thomas, and David A. Van Voorhis with forty-two each; Gordon I’ Baker, Curl W. Carlson, and Hichard Rowland, forty each; Charles c (’ring, Thomas W. Newell, Lee Kail Richard, and Robert W. Steven-, thirty-nine each; and Charles \V. Freeby, thirty-eight.
Are Too Ready for Santa?' X It not wa offer an Immedl- / [at* aolntlon ot your problems, j Simply call on ua for tha ? necessary cash—pay ua back ! at your conven-tenco. , Christmas shopping need not Iba a worry—Sea us, wa will ♦xidii.ln oar easy plan, t. Loans From ■ %a f $20 to $300. ' *4 INPIANA LOAN CO.! o i l K. Waihingto Phone 15
JUST WHAT HUT) Llkli
M
Nothing 1 More • Appropriate Than STATIONERY THE LATEST IN UNIQUE GIFT BOXES SAM HANNA’S BOOK STORK
CHRISTM \S ME SUGGEST For “HIM” Pipes Pipe Tobacco Cigarettes Cigars Lighters Hill Folds Fountain Pens For “HKR” Powder Perfume Compacts Stationery Pox Candy Toilet Sets And many other items that are bound to please. - • OWL FLEENOR’S DRUG STORES
A Hrownie camera is just what your boy would like for Christmas. All he needs do to take good pictures with a Hrownie is press the lever.
(’ome in now and select your youngster’s Brownie. . * ,r 3 v ft
R P. MULLINS G K KENCASTLE, 1NDI ANA
Ox/ k k jSi k
GIVE HER A Permanent For Xmas
No gift you could give would give, m> much gatiafacton and p! asure aa one of our natural looking-waves. I *Phone now and make your Appointment. y ' i Kainhow JJeauty Salon ^ ALAMO BLDG. PHONE »0I-L j
