The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 March 1931 — Page 4

THE DArcr BANNER, OKEENrASI'LE, INDIANA. MONDAY, MARCH 30,1081.

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f I

EASTER SALE of Gloves S2. ( i!i \iilurs $1.59

Pair

French Kid, turn hack cuffs, whites, tans, hrms ns, Krays. Itoeskin Kluves, slipon style, in white and ckkshell S1.9S Fair. ( hanioisette gloves in white and pastel colors 98c Fair. Costume Jewelry I (it MasliT 50C and $1.00

S. C. Prevo Company I Ionic' Store

CLASSIFIED ADS

i;\ i.in mi v. i i i;< i kk al APPLl \ N 1 ES si m.n:s ami sum U E . I’honr lie. j. r. nun

—For SALK— HAHV CHICKS—from pure bred, blood tested flocks. Culled for type color, ami rtandanl rmiuiroments. Sets each Monday and Thursday. Custom hatchnjr, $:i,00 per hundred. Brooders and poultry supplies. Kec- ] oid’s Hatchery. Old I'feiffenberK'T Ulacksiuith Shop, 11 c ist Franklin St. I’hone hlH.

l!mlliri> Iriiil KYsumnl \llrr

ALLEGED GUNMAN CHARGED WITH MURDER OF CHICAGO

TRIBUNE REPORTER

courts have minimized as not beiii>r

•in exact science.

The only other important state witness yet to lie heard, barring: surprise.' which Brooks admitted might

I wo-lhiN Rnvss " A ,'; r 7

trunk salesman. He has been called to point out Brother- as the man who had slipped furtively into his stoic

after the murder.

Kellstrom is relied upon to testify he man came forward when discovered, bought the first arti de he saw. and went with feai apparent to a

Mai c|i ::o (FP) The

CHICAGO

Olid ol I., o \ llrotlicis, i harm'll wu-hiiiom where under a stiong light with murdoi ing Mf'd.l. I.ingle, <"ni-i bis features were etched into the . ago riib'iiic reporti i, was ii sumed salesman’s memory. toil iy with both tato and defense toitifi' by now plan-, made during KNIGHTS TEMPLAR NEWS Ibo two-day olj.iuinment, which I Knights Templar all over Indiana placed jury I. liberation.' another ten bjivp already begun making preparadays away. j lions to attend the thirty-eighth tii-A.-sislanl .-tale att nicy C. Way- 'tinial conclave of the Grand Kncampland Brook' ai iiounci'd the state had I ment of the United States which will

altered ils intention to icst today and probably would rei|uire all of Tues-

1'OR SALE-Small rc.-taurant. Ad- | dres- Box X, Bamn i Office, IM-tl KOR TRADE: Emdson Tractor and plows in A-1 shape in exchange foi |iair of mules or hiirse.~. James Edi wauls, I mile west of ('oatesville. UO-lp. -—For Rpnt|*’OR RENT Two or three rooms, funiish( , (l oi unfurnished, with gic- | ilen. Rhone (KiH-Y. 30-3ts I OR RENT: d mom modem apartment with gas range. |U(; Anderson street. ‘JC-Tts. I ___ FOR REN I Almo-t new -ix roam modern lion, e on paved street, reasnnalde. lni|uire Mnnnetl Shoe Shop. 27-30-2ts —Wauled— WANTED J or :i Ions of alfalfa elover or bean hay Rhone 758-X, :io-2p. WANTED I’apci hanging, painting, and deciirat ing. Satisfaction guaranteed. Served Rutnnm ('ountv for 10 years. William II Welch, al)i! Main St. Rhone it.'TTK. 'J4-6p. —liOSt — LOST: Fox Huuiuls, one white and black female other black tan and blucticked. Reward. A. W Iselin, l*utnaniville. 27-dt. Miscellaneous— Older all kinds of Stark fruit treeanil shrubbery from G. W. Crawley, Rhone 517. 2K-‘2ts Hoauty Box Rermaiieivts, $5.00, SO.0(1, $7.50, and $10. Book your appointment now. Satisfaction assured. 3U-2p

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l irRl limp i| Iia« bren to nr! a fnll'Rizpd elertrir washer of \ OSS qualit> for only The New VOSS Iiar ffill-nizpd porrrlain tub, \X rNtinchoiiAP motor, la>\pll wnnkPr with luricr 2 inrh rolU, fiilli rnrlo«e<l mrrhaniiim, bpaul> of line and finiah, ami it in ihr only waAlier that rlrant by ihr hand-trathing

method*

mmM

You U ,.h y I Dirt

In fl»A Stidi at the Top.

Vo?« *Jlf4 Utor W iabe

at

Asya

fall, to"

th' , Bottom.

Browning-Hammond Hardware Company

«»

KELTI’ES

* •••' y;>; : *

* .♦

( hinese Omelet I cup scalded milk. 1-2 cup grated cheese. 4 eggs. ;;-4 cup cooked rice. 1 tablespoon butter. 1-2 teaspoon salt. Separate eggs. Beat yolks until | light. All all the ingredients except | the egg white. Beat whites until fluf-j fy. Fold carefully into yolk mixture j Bake slowly until egg is thoroughly set. Serve with tomato sauce. 5 to (> serving.-. Eggs Huntington <i hard cooked eggs. 2 cups thick white' sauce.

Saft.

Reppcr.

1 cup diced American cheese. 1-2 cup buttered crumbs. Dice the eggs andarran gc a, layer In a buttered baking dish. Sprinkle | generously with cheese, seasonings and cover with white sause. Continue layers till all ingredients are used. Sprinkle with crumbs and hake at i 350 degrees (a moderate oven) until

brown.

Deli veil Egg Salad. II hard cooked eggs.

Pinch of salt,

t Tablespoon cream. Endive or water cress. 2 tablespoons grated cheese.

Pepper to taste.

2 tablespoons mayonnaise. Ri /iove y olks from egg- and mash. Add cream, grated cheese, mayonnaise and licat all until fluffy. Arrange j - three halves on lied of curley endive M RSK OK LEPERS \l

HAIM E/0 R AVAD B

—Show

">K

X

Tuesday and \\ ed 1U v| day Mats. 2 R. M. - H)r . :tUr Ni«h.s 7 - tt R. M. __ 1((c . ;l . ( Imagine a druntoj Cowboy on a rea|| horse!

Where the fun begins ~i. T[[ | laughs are laughs-w|„. ri . guns and gags gi\,. b.ild, had Im| Haines just the kind of |,idur, J fans are yelling for! Rinfiili' BikIi-o Ilf Roars. i;o ln ., hl , I and Red-blooded \clion!

with

LELIA HYAJMS FOLLY MORAN

(LIFF EDWARDS

ADDED TALKINl. i mu p, ‘DANCE WITH Ml " Will! \LL-STAlt ( \S','

TO-DAY—.loan ( rawford In “Our Blushing Brides" will, |,ig

cast of stars—10c - 35c

Reveioml was (|uotc I as saying, "While in Iviropi' last |iiing, I heat'd of only three An ricah cities, N'-w Yolk with its wealth, Chicago with its ra ki't'cis and Reno with iL- love racketed s.” , At meting i f lun heon clubs and in new-iiapci cilitorials, Reno 'Iciiied ill was running a “racket,” declaring di- ! vome wa- purely a business propo.-i-' tion of a lawful humane nature.

iollmoiv SiMiiors

or watercress -o that points of eggs are toward center. W’ith pastry tube fill yolk mixture back into egg' whites Garnish with pickled midget onions

and radish roses. 4 servings.

‘ivhmiI Plav

• lay. Vnothei week is cxiiected to lie taken up by the defense. The most trcnuous battle of tbe trial was in prospect when the state call' Col. ( ilvin S. (ioiblatil, ballistics •Tigincfi at tbe N rtbwestein university of crime detection, to testify that only line pi.-tol could have fired the

bullet that killed Lillgle. riie pi.-tol, Goildaril’ inict osc.opi ti -ts ay-

be held at Minneapolis, June 20'to 26, and it is expected that the Indiana lelegatioli will he the largest that has ever attended one of these meeting which ure regarded the high point in Mn-nnic demonstrations. The Hoo-ier state will not only he represented by Sit Knights, but also by a number of rack ill ill teams that w ill take pait in tbe competitive prize drills that form a colorful feature of the tri-en-

icport ini his nial meetings.

wa- the one j Detailed information hits been -ent

wbicb i lark 1 Xppli'gate, tbe horse In Indiana eonimaniluries by tbe triIrainei who (a-bi I Litigle's checks, ennial lomniittee which includes swon w.i tin wit away by Brothers j George L. Davis, of Kokomo, chait whib lacing com tin Illinois Central man; George F. Hitchcock, of Rly ubway a'ter t!ie munb i. | iimuth, secretaiy-treasurer; Meade loothci attoi my, I yrell \. krutn, : \e-tal, of Nohlcsviilc, chairman of wb 29-yeai old I publicity; William W. Sitckow, of client, -aid would fight Goddard's I Franklin an I Edward .1. Seoonover, of D tiinony o tie giomul that ballist- Indianapolis. Many of the details am •is i- only a tloory which bigbei now being worked out, members of

Slur I Itims — lYrl (Jmrk I rum ( urnfed ( atlle Roasts, Lb 13c

S|MVUll Mi;\T N!ICi;s \|{M(M irs or \\ hole, IJ>. I l)H‘l Chuck lender and .lute) Steak, Lb

Ih c! lolSoil. h iulcr& juicN. .1 Lh.

l!n ! - Crcsh Crouml l.legant for meat loaf 2 Lbs. 25c l ock Loin Half or whole Lb. Mb' Chops, Lb. 23c (haiiiios V SeedleM and Sweet 2 Do/ 35c

liomnl or Sirloin • • Sftak or Swiss Ikicdii

23c

Half or Whole, Lb. 21c Squares, Lb. ... 13c Sk‘nl Potato(‘s IRISH (VDbLKKS For Kam:, $3.04 Fer Bu 81.5(1

tin . ommitti c say, and it is exiK'cted that l e Indiana division in the Minneapolis (leiiioasti atioit will lie headed hy a templar band of unusual size. It is pointed out that all Masons ninl their frii'iios are invited to mak" the trip fur which apecial railroad

transputtation i- being arranged, j w y u . n

Special cars will start from Indianapolis, Ft. Wayne and intermediate points Saturday evening, June 20, over the Rcmt-y Ivania railroad, including Riclmtcnd and Logunsport. All will In combined at Chicago for the journey to Minneapolis over the < hicago and North western line, with all modem railway advantages. It is announced that aside from the usual Grand Encampment features, Mima apoli is preparing a wonderful program of entertainment for the vi.-itois. I lie Indiana party will ar five Sunday afternoon in time fm the beginning of. the conclave ceremonies. I lie Indiana committee announces that fog the return trip there | will In attra tive features including la steamer voyage from Duluth, to Rort Arthur, Ontario, Saulte j Marie, Detroit, and thence by rail line to Indianapolis and other points.. I here also is olfered a post-conveu-lion trip to X elluwstone I’urk, the I Black Hills, returning by way of Silt!

Lake City.

MRS. I E'IRLE'S I Id.EGK \M" TO III (il\ I N IN HIGH S< HOOL FRIDAY.

On Friday evening, April 3, at M o'clock the seniors of Fillmore high s bool w ill pre t'iit in the an litorium a three-act fame, “Mrs. Temple’s Telegtum.” The drama, written hv Trank Wyatt and William Morris, is presented by ■ pecial arrangement with Samuel French of New York. The play takes place in the London residence of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Temple, !)D Cruzun street, Mayfair. “Oh, what a tangled web we weave,

practice to deceive”

may well be applied to the gcnetal theme. With Mrs. Temple’s refusal to believe the tiuth as at first told |

DAM WORKERS FORM VILLAGE LAS VEGAS. New, March 30, (URt \ thriving little city which neither the federal government nor the state i f Nevada had planned on, has sprung up—mining camp style—near the Boulder boat landing 33 mile.- from

here.

It is a “tent city” com(Kised mostly of men and their families awaiting employment on Boulder dam construction. Many of them had small takes to live on until the work got under way and are living frugally to make th" money last until they find jolts. At least 50 tents house the men and their families and two stores, also in tents, supply the campers with pro-

visions.

The dwellers provide their own amusement. Scvcial times a week they hold forth on the sand dunes with old fashioned dances. They ad journ to a favorite .s| K ,t below the bank of the river after supper, bring and fiddler and a guitar player with them, and soon there is dancing and

singing.

f.EC'l I RF.R BLAMES RlM.I I M S EUR MANX WORLD EVILS DETROIT, Mar. 30, I UR I—There’s

MOLAK \l IS i M.I.F.D REST

Two Meals I >ay Best For Stomach Troubll

Skip one meal and ilnnk water h teail. w a*h out ,1

effect of this German (Imtor -milingly, his blue eyes twinklm.., hind his gold rimmed "'p.

by the hu-band, difficulties arise, and ,

one falsehood leads to another until ' " ,,M ' f,,r tl, ‘ worl<l ,f H' 1 ' 1 ’* i" taken uffairs are quite complicated. Mu •hi 01 '! ,,f ,h '' han<1 ‘ wf ' ,olitici,4 "s. »'«>•« humor is found, and there are parts | All,,Mt K ' lw ' ln, " P l ’P ul} ' r lw ’-

which max cau . some thinki g to , " r " r Bnd i">'.d.o , og,- 1

,| ()np " tggam, in an address before the

I wit Hall C lub here, declared there are three great possibilities that lie

The cast of chain,tors is: Wigson, a servant, Tor11 - Williamson. Jack Temple, who tries to tell the truth, Maynard Ruhinson; Frank Fuller, Jack’s triend, Morris Hunter; Captain Shaipc, in love with Dorothy, Horse e| ( am phi II. John Brown, a hairdresser, J. D. Higgins; Mis. Jack Temple, who .ends a telegram, Max-

ahead of the world. “First, that men shall take the instruments of seien e and destroy civilization. They have tried it many

times.

Second, that men shall go on thru lung periods of economic, scientific

they are

ine Johnson; Dorothy, Mrs. Temple’s j “"I 1 f K,lilkal a

'i'tcr, Franc. Iluntei; Mr-. John ! d ' i,,K n °" '''’ j Blown, who complicates affairs, Mar-

tha Byrd.

“And third, that men may apply hu.nan intelligence to human affairs."

^Mcirkcb’

IW.1I MODEL OF SIR t\ VI I kb RALEIGH USED IN

INDIAN \ROMS I,IVESItn K

JOHN D \ W son DEAD John Dawooti, son of Willis and Margaret (Mil on) Dawson, pas-.d iiway some time Friday night of organic heart trouble at his home m ar

i arp«*nter ville.

Mr. Dawson was born October P, 1X71 near t arpenteisville and and was the young, si of four children and serve I in the Spanish American war. The funeral will be held Tuesday morning at ten o’clock tit the ( arp.■ nterseiHe chundj. T ie Rev. Brattain id Bainbiidge will have charge of the services and the burial will be in Huinhridge cemetery. BUM K ( II \REI, M. K. ( HI B( II We had a good attendance Vcstei day. Let u kigp it up. Serviceevery night except Saturday at 7;:’.n p. m. Rev. R. B. Baldridge. 'heno resents slurs of NKVAD.t HISHOR RT^xO. N’cv.. March 30, (Uri Reno has publicly announced its retentmen! against statements marie by the Rt. Rev. Thomn- Jenkins, Episcopal bis top of Nevada, to the press while he wa traveling in the east®

Hogs receipts l,5l)0 holdovers 226:

maikct mostly |5c higher on weight.mil l6o lb-,; others steady to 10c higher; 160 to 2ln Hu. *M..’I0 to $X.35; 210 to 240 Hi- $k.15 to $K.2o; 240 to 2S0 lbs. $7.05 to $s.U5; 2X0 to 350 liis. $7.65 to $7.8.'); 140 to 160 lbs. *7.7o to $8.00; 1(10 to 140 lb . 7.50 to $7.65;

pa king -ow - <0.25 to AT.00.

('attle receipt - $p0; calves, receipts ;<I0; slaughter classes steady; few light steers to sell ground $8.00; some cows $1.25 to $5.50; heifers mostly* s6 to $7.50; oil I head to sell under $8 and slightly abuv. ; low euttors and cutties $;t t.i $4: v. iler- o|iened.steudy at |

$!) ilmvn; few late arrivals $'.1.50.

Sheep receipts 100; run mostly low j

T< imiNGTQN, Conn., March 30, (UR)—Sir Walter Raleigh spread hicloak over a mud puddle to assist a fair lady to cross the i-treet, but in t icse times of hustle and bustle, tilings arc done differently. Hence an advertisement in a local

pa|*er which read:

"On Monday afternoon on upper Church street, while driving n ,y cari | some water was splashed upon the sidewalk and on the dress of a young lady dn i'll in brown. The driver was on a very important call and could not Stop but he desires to have' that young daily make herself known 1 mid any damage will Ik- cove led." LABORERS TURN SCI LlTORs

HONOLULU, March 30, (UR)—Ira “Brother Joseph” Dutton, who sought

to expiate a worldly life by humble! each morning by drinking uatcr »3 service to the lepCrs of Molokai, died I V oonf “ 1 ', ,f 8 'mp | e glycerin, J . . , , , , , thorn bark, saline rump,,,i , , J m a hospital here of 1.1 age. Adlenka I H Dutton would have been 88 years I Adlerika brings out poisuii- v,,., oil April 27. Hi- health had been j ur thought were in your w. failing for the past year. More than • vou are nervem-, can't sl('..|i, f. ( half his life bnd been devoted to the, 7.?;,! ' V 8ur l ,r j s ' ' iik victims of the worlds most loath-ome by tomorrow you feel the disease when, hi- eycsiu'nt almost "fr,.,.* «u: /■ 1

gone, he was brought here last July that a cataract might be removed

from his left eye.

What impelled the dashing Ira Dutton, civil war hero and successful busine s man, to forsake the world and seek atonement in a religious life was something he never told. Once, commenting on the appioach of his IMJth birthday he said with a twinkle in that the graph of his life represented "forty-five years up and forty-

five years down."

But while the secret of whatever he regarded as his sins wa- locked within bis heart, it was said his conversion at the age of 40 and his desire to become a religious winker were regarded with some doubt by tbe Trappist brotherhood. “The result was he remained through the re t of his life merely a lay luother, never admitted J t full membership in the priestly or-

dei,

Dutton kept his friendship with utiier civil war veterans after coming to Hawaii and the leper settlement, hut those were almost his only contact with the world which knew the first four decades of his life. In the Molokai colony he became a disciple of the martyi priest, Father Damien, who died of leprosy three yens later in 1XHD. Dutton never contracted the di-ease, although he lived II years in daily contact with its victims. Regardles.- of the impulse which led him to Molokai, Brother Joseph was no mournful mourner. He found happiness in serving those lepers assigned to the gioup he supervi.-ed in Kulawau, one of the tw o towns making up the Molokai colony of five hundred odd lepers. Uniil his eyesight failed, he kept Pace with the world’s affairs thiough a dozen carefully selected newspapers I and magazines. His personal corres- ! pondenee was one of hi.- greatest joys. He remembered with a curd and a bit of verse the birthday each year of evi ry one of his many friends, iind t’le occasional viaitois to the settlement always made pilgrimages to his lit:I'' rought board house, where the little man with the short gray beard always stood ready to greet them

.11 ROBS \kt: drawn

Grand and petit .J term of the Rutnam i'im m

which begins next

were drawn Mondi .j County jury commissioners. Grand jurors drawn werGreenlee, Floyd town-nip; ,|, I Hooker, Jack-on, M.n. .-iJ toil, Russell; (\ G. I , in V. sj Harry Mabb, Jefferson; .ed.l'ui

Johnson, Madison.

Retit jurors drawn are Charlel Robbins, Franklin; John I. K.'llm W a lipigton, lip j • | Clovcrdale; Lon Arnold, Grin i-w; Paul McKeehan, Monn ' T| Harbi-on, Russellville; T'riiiil ShafiB Warren; Roscoc Daggv, GrcerradJ II T.Rroadstree t, C|,.' • . K •’•’I Zeiner, Marion; Herbi I fersim, E. Elmer Crawlev, Grc.'ixi

tie.

Additional Ijitals . Aigene Girton retun "d t.. la- | at llumrick Station from tin ciintf

h'-spiUl.

John Medaris, ..f Rock i mn. 1-1 a DeRauw student residing at T M T. 0. House, entered th. <'ounty B lir | pital Sunda.v for treatment of n 'j foetid hand. The home of James Vt li.'.vmii 1 '' .Madison township, h-' been .|Ui*r |,n ’ tilled because of -inallpox l.y !' r John A. Egan, county health "H |l ’ , ‘ r ' Sheriff Alva Bryan went t Igan City Monday to deliv.'i » T" ! ‘ oner to state pri.-on authnriti.'s |iT isoiicr whs Orville Drf’Wt'i. 1 aulo tiller. Who ha- a lerin '' ten years to serve W. If. Hitts, r.DfncHstle K ' horn h contincl to cement drive on the sout! -nl' postoffiec across the gia-s pi west side to the fire departnn 1 ing driveway. Extension of ’" 111 will give more room for mal 1111 and other vehicles.

I

I P I # EASTEIk

easTek- l N Ui^ s •

In a statement from Chicago, file owing.

* ; pSSffS 1 .the new Tnruty College (’ha l iel, gift

Fre l. r k I) Williams, n, exeeutoi j untrr.'.pilt! ldl| M |!l' U i , neor 1 !,' V, , li !'i' <i '

..I the will „f William H. Williamson, j -t met ure. At the suggeltU, .'f vl!

1 ■’ *** ’ " W " carried black! ^ “ n,i ’ » ' ’ 1 « <'••’ their .-pur,' time car..,,

•' P»> rhe pe best of which were el, ; .in

a g, 11 e. t (be tile have been ullowed mi , n , , . * "orkl.ut 'Irat Claims are still ^ . 1M:rew d . riv ‘ : ‘ < *. hummers and

Sat/ it with

FLOWERS

picks to achieve rwnarlcable results, according t<j the judges.

Eitcl Floral Co.

>

-u

frcsili beautiful • longblooming bouquet* a ml plant.'* Phone 636

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