The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 October 1931 — Page 4
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 19,1931.
New Fall Merchandise At The Lowest Prices In Years. HIGHEST QUALITY AT LOW PRICES. Fine Fluffy Part Wool Blankets, 72x84 sateen ribbon bound, fine selected cotton mixed with wool, weighs 5 lb., a marvelous blanket. Special $2.88 Outing, extra quality 26 inches wide, l>oth light and dark colors. Special 131c Yard ( omforts, new cotton filled, home made, size 72 \ 84 lovely patterns $3.00 Uirge size 70 x NO plaid blankets, large block plaids. 49c Boys’ ribbed union suits, all sizes to 16. 50c Suil Ladies’ .Medium Weight I’nion Suits, fine qualiP cotton, striped with ravon. well made 50c S" 1 ' VVf ineii’.iun here ju.>t u few of the many pedal items we have lo offer S. C. PREVO COMPANY UO.ML STORE
Vincennes Water
’ Freshman is an individual—not just another. I am for you, even the lady wh* signs her letter E- E. E. and does not know what a “Deke” is. You haven’t missed anything. Forgive me
Dekes, I enjoyed that dinner last year—all but the tuxedos. OWNERS OF LOCAL COMPANY How is this so-called telegram from TAKE RATE FIGHT INTO Alexander. It was written on a tele- FEDERAL COURT
graph blank and reads “Everyone
DR. OXNAM IN LONG LETTER
TO STUDENTS (Continued from page 1)
j and a safe return back to old De* - - - — . Pauw. For (h) eaven’s sake don’t go b °th. Stop. AJ! envy you i Vincenne8 Water Compa „ y , Purple a d
near the ’forbidden country.” I won’t, 12. “Writing to the President of a University is a new experience for me and I suppose I ought to be very care- ( ful of my grammar, spelling, punctu1 ation, sentence construction . . •” I’ll forgive that “gramnier” old man be-
: cause of Japanese greeting and your yere
| pledge We will beat Wabash.” 13. “Take a GTNrickasha ride for i me ” I am a prohibitionist, Homer.
your trip to orient. Should stop. Have
TIGER CUBS LOSE
Coach Marion Crawley’s Greeiicas- ^
. _ . . . tie high school gridde* journeyed to
Case Is Appealed eleven. This was not such a bad showing, I considering the fact that the locals were handicapped by crippled first string players and ineligibilitj.
Gray warriors
fought hard all the way but the su-
vronderful "time! Don’t'"stop^" There 1 0 P era ^ e d by the same officials v ‘ 1*° per for weight and experience of the
Tom” contro1 the tjreenca ‘ stle " at ^ r C powerful up-Monon team proved a
took its battle for increaseu
little too much.
Many fans here ex-
much
is work to be done here- Must
he S, “ P ° r aw C„UK ^ th . cubj w w* bs . W. ... Hoi|«lulu. Til. “ SZ .hfl.uTS' ^
to Los Angeles was interesting as ‘ '' , .
.. , i ation and rate order set recentlj
the days there, meeting old , , ... . _
the Indiana public semce
Showing Tonigh, GEORGE ARUss
■THE MILLIONAIRE 10c & 35c Tues. - Wed.
friends, and I hope making new friends for DePauw. Our ship is ex. quisitely appoint'd, marvelous deck-.
I put more than one hundred aside dimming pool, gjmnasium library.
si on.
The water company made application for an injunction to prevent the,
Leu-’
ruireu aside “ “““ “ ’ ‘ ,’t’ 1 commission. Governor Harry G. I a.— ic nrprinu^ ‘■Lin \t;iciTiu3s, bturt •', ucinlv trcANtl uf - , is precious ’ . , ..... In. Attorney General James M. Og-,
to quote from, but space „
in the DePauw. There was a letter ^ce, phonograph gallerj, modernistic
| from Professor O. II. Smith, written decorations—everything. We __ — , i forcing
I on tile 2Cth, written in joyful strain. * sa B on steam. It i- a motor sliip, and , , ' The 2Cth is pay-day students. And v ' e ure thus motoring to Japan. I blessings on the cartoon sent by Dor- shall "rite you again from Japan aid 1 othy and Margaret Wright- On tiie the brief -top in Hawaii. For ; left is Golden Gate, in the center the present, here is a “Toast to old De-Chichibu-Maru. on the right Japan. Pauw and our love to you all-
Attorney
do not den and the city of Vincennes from
the latest
ONE OK TWO 15 INK BANDITS \\ \S HELD HERE
the commission’s new-
rhedule of water rates, ordered for
rates
P UK \URESTED IN SAN FK VX
CISCO FOR ROBBERY OF
FRANKFORT RANK
“Rent W’abash”.
Ever sincerely yours. , (Signed) G. BROMLEY OXNAM.
K ATS 1RLF t A I
TRY A BANNER CLASSIFIED FOR RESULTS
On the deck of the ship .-tand-- Pr ;:y. field glasses in hand, looking towed Japan, but wonder of wonders, anft compliment of compliments, in thej breeze long locks of thick hair are blowing. Thank you my dears, thank
you. I am referring your cartoon to the German barber who nearly talked SAX LEANDRO, Cab. (UP)—
me into a cure for imminent baldness., Oueer tilings happen on the city line , i liked a letter from a little lady between Sun Leandro and Oakland. ., u ' H c '" ' ’•
1 who lives in Washington and knows San Leandro police discovered when the Japanese Ambassador. T wish the they received a call to rescue a cat, cherry blossoms were out- If they which had been chased up a tree by were I would send some- rats. They cogitated, investigated, Allredge, Dygett and Wyatt gave and informed the complaintant the me a new idea. Thanks. cat was in, the city of Oakland and it Then there were scores of letters was none of the San Leandro force’s ’rom “just another Freshman.” Don’t business- They advised purchase of a
, let the Sophs worry you. Every lot trap.
Nov. 1. and asks that present
remain in effect-
The suit charges action of the com-i mission was unconstitutional, in that
it. would be confiscatory of their! SAN FRAXCISCO, Cal., Oct. 19. property- I Held under arrest in San Francisco
Hie company's property used and useful for local consumers was valued nl .$£00,000 in findings by the public ;, rvice commission Oct. 2. approxnnateliy $700,000 les- than the value set by the company. The commissioii stated that a p-tuvn of j per cent
th.! company.
The appeal recited that in a previous rate fight the United States District Court of Appeals had fixed >. valuation of $1,032,000 on its property and stipulated that a fair return' would be 7 percent annually and that this valuation still is effective. The Vincennes water rate fight ha» been in the court and before the com-
mission since 1927.
Are they as good as when the ruffles came down to the ankles?
FOOD? . . . You bet they are! Maybe the j^irls are even better. Anyhow, cigarettes arc a whole lot better. No doubt about that. The) used to be nude by hand— A ow it's nuu/iiues; no hand butycurt rvrr touches them. 1 he) used tu be packed in expensive, highfalutin ’ cardboard boxes— Now the quality is in the cigarettes. 'I be L. S. Revenue Tax used to be a penii) a package of twenty— Sow it’s six cents a package oj twenty. 1 obacco used to be dried by air— Sow Liggett w' J hers alone has thirtyfive drying machines of the latest type, with a daily capacity (J o ver J, COO, 000 pounds—and over four miles tf warehouses for tobacco storage. Better—they’re tni/is better! Everything used in the manufacture of C hesterfield cigarettes is the best that money can buy or that Science knoAts about. Chesterfield tobaccos — both Turkish and Domestic — are mild and ripe, the best that money can but. And the aaaa Chesterfield tobaccos are blended and cross-blended is like making a wav and better-tasting kind of tobacco, A\ith greater smoothness, more mildness and a more pleusii^r aroma — a fragrance and flavor nut *> he found in any other cigarette. Chester! illd gives you the benefit of all tBe Avorld knoAvs about the production of better cigarettes. Nobody smokes a better cigarette than Chesterfield.
and Oakland on separate charges, Ariel Mayol, 36. and Charles Omar, 40, were the subjects of police investigation today in connection with the $65,000 robbery of a bank at Frank-1 fort, Ind., last December. M- yol was arrested here Sept. 8 charged with forgery. He is alleged to have passed a fraudulent cashier's check drawn on the Santa Cruiz bank, for $100. He is now awaiting trial in superior court on the forgery charge. Omar was arrested in Contra Costa county, October 5, for Richmond police. He is charged with having passed a worthless check for $25. He u being held in the Contra Costa county jail for trial and pending investiga-
tion.
Authorities of Contra Costa have | been in communication with officials in Indiana. The Frankfort police said Omar had been identified by pictures. Ma>ol has been arrested numerous times. He has been in custody in Greencastle, Ind.; Omaha, Neb.; Portland, Ore.; Colorado Springs, where he escaped jail; Ogden, Utah; Las Angeles, Santa Barbara and San Francisco.
m - %.(■ ClAll REB0UNI ROBERT AMES MYRXA U I Churn: R. hmU.Hm 10c A 85c GRAKADA
TIGERS DROP EARLHVU 12-2
INSPECTION M ADE
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 17 (UP) Indiana conservation commissioners and departmental officials and work ers today inspected new buildings at Shakamak and McCormicks Creek
Canyon state parks.
Luncheon was served the party, bad.
Touchdowns in the first and second quarters enabled DePauw to defeat a stubborn Earlhain football squad, 12 to 2 on Blackstock field Saturday afternoon. The game was rather slow and devoid of any special thrills with the Tigers holding a 12 to 0 lead at
the half.
About the middle of i ie opening period, a .-erica of line plunges gave McCullough, promising sophomore fullback, an opportunity to .core. Bradley’s kick for an extra point was
including civic leaders and prominent citizens of Green, Sullivan and Clay counties, at Shakamak, in northwestern Sullivan county. The Shakamak development, Richard Lieber, conservation director said, was planned to provide group camping accommodations for 4-H clubs, Boy and Girl Scouts, civic organizations, farm bureau members and other Hoosier parties. Six buildings providing sleeping facilities, a dining hall, bathhouses and an administration building were constructed there this year. The large artificial lake at Shakamak is the first attempt of conservation officials to provide such an attraction in any of the units of the Indiana park
chain.
Following the inspection tour of the tri-county 'park, the party will drive to McCormicks Creek Canyon State reserve near Spencer, in Owen
county.
There, a two-story brick building, with 22 sleeping rooms equipped with hot and cold running water and team heating systems, will be dedicated. Other work accomplished this year at McCormicks Creek park included steam heating of the obi hotel building and remodeling of the dining hall. Lieber said the new hotel
Soon after the second quarter got underway, a sweeping end run by Rice gave the Old Gold its second touchdown. Tiie attempt for an additional point again failed. Neither team scored in the third period, the Methodist seeming to lack tiie needed punch deep in Earlham territory. Opening a forward passing attack in the final frame, the Richmond boys worked the leather oval down to the five yard line but the Tiger wall held. A DePauw puc.t was blocked but Bradley fell on the ball. This however, resulted in a safety and two points for the wisitors which concluded the scoring for the afternoon. Lineup and summary:
DePauw (12)
Copeland
More
Leahy
Tomlinson. . Shirey
Hammond Moffett Rice Bradley .McCullough.... Score by periods:
DePauw Earlham
LE LT I/r
C
RG RT RE
<2
RH , F
F.arlham (2) ... .Sohneidwind ... Gottschalk Alley Dickinson Parker Ellis .... Kirkpatrick Lucas Kastetter ..,, Kausel
0—12 2- 2
Touchdow n—M c t u 11 ough. Ric' e ’
•structure cost $45,000.
A large portion of the state park I^ty— Bradley (DePauw). Substiimprovement system is supported by tutions (DePauw) Williams, tolk-
paid admissions to the many grounds maintained by Indiana and donations ri^'in persons interested in the conservation department’s program, it was
learned-
Statebou.se correspondents for the o piml newspapers and press associations, and newspapermen from the
the
district visited, were guests of
commission on the trip.
man, Wheaton, McEvvan, SimpiMii Crain, McKinstry, Medarry, Hornaday, Lcngden, Jenkins; F.arlhaitil Con - way, Hampton, Vurley, Stonerock, Er* sham. Referee — Bayh. I mpire— Bogue. Headlinesmar—M Millait.
ST AIL COLLEGES
Wisconsin, 21; Purdue, 14Indiana, 0; Iowa, 0 (tie>Notre Dame, 03; Drake, 0. Defiance, 6; Manchester, tl.
14; North-
Notre Dame reserves,
^ 1951. LlMffr* Myshs Tobacco Co.
30 HANKS IX SWEDEN
STOCKHOLM, (UP)— Sweden has 30 banking companies, with 1,045 bank offices in different parts of the'
country, or one office for each 5.870 we ' ,tt “ rn resenes. 6
inhabitants, according to the latest of- ! ' Vaba8h , 21 ! Bail SUte 2 rt . ficial statistics. The total funds of 1,1,no18 reserves. 12; l ,ldl * the banks amounted to 821.430,000 stn ' , ‘ s rt- , a kronor at the end of 1930. and the to- 1 franklin, 10; State Norma' tal turnover was 5,706,630,000 kronor, l:1; Ha "” ver ’ N ' utrt 1 an increase of six per cent In compar-' Western State Teachers, (> •
; ison with 1929. I Dame “B”, 6. i DePauw, 12; Earlham. 2SCHOOL BUILT IX ONE DAA ! Central Normal, 12; Dak an
j CAPE CREEK, Ore., (UP)—A °-
1 •’<> by 50 f." t hit, Tl • house 30 pupils, was builf in one day THIS M EEh’S HEATH here. Employes of the state highway — — * , construction crew did the con.strue-l Ruins Monday or ^Tuesuaj ^ tion work. The students will Re child-!again ebout Thur day: warro * '—t*
teacher will be the employes.
; ^ ^ nigh*. the wife of one ift Thursday and colder
week.
ren of the construction gang, and the u .y. colder Tim via tf'JirVlAP Xl* 111 4U.. J Jt e> m t • i 1.4..»•
partner end uf
‘J
