The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 February 1932 — Page 2

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Tii” BAITxNZrv. INOIAInA. TuaSDAi - TTBttl AR1? ^:i93z.

POSTtD

fVc'/iitiffton Street at Indiana.

Pan of our duty is to keep p-v.-on business and financial maters. That’s why, when you strike a “snag” in your affairs, you’re more than likely to find here the information and counsel that will untangle it—offered, moreover, in a spirit of helpful, friendly willingness.

1 THE DAILY BANNER

And

Herald Consolidated "it W»t*« For Ait" Entered in the postoffke at Greencastle, Indiana, as accord class mail matter mjder act of March 8, 1879. Subscriptioa price, 10 cents per

CherUntj and Satinas .4,'rnunt! \fatuiqement of Trusts Management of Proferty .■Idministration of Estates /n'uranre and Real E r tate Safe Defrit Bores

'd Paid on Sat ingx I HE FIRST NATION \l. B \Nk I In- Oldest Bank in Putnam ('aunty UTI/ENS TRUST CO MPANA • • ritt‘ Home ttf tho Systematic Safer

CTAiNLiSf

^ Same formula. • same price. Is reap ~hich

c" c sal tons. *eo. if you prefer ,a&/COLDS VvSKS

VS^MiLLiOfi JA8S

[event in the senior carnival Also at

I the next meeting, tfcey are

1 ■ • ’ -ill be given to the need...

4. J. + A * +

~ee£: $3 00 per ‘year by mail in Putnam county; $3 50 to $5 00 per year by mail outside Putnam county.

Soctefr

Dinner Bridpe AP Countr;- (*iuS’ Fonipht

Members of the Country Ot.b %vui entertain their friends with a dinner

the dab tonignt at

! oridge at

I c’cloch.

Missionary Society To

Meet Wednesday

The Woman's Foreign

SEED

There are certain see ^ that have The Woman’s Foreign Missionary been known through all time to yield* Society will meet in Keystone chapel a harvest of rejoicing. T e antithesis ‘ at 2:30 P M Wednesday. Mrs. Harof this is the pest see-i from which old Zink trill have chapters 3 and 4 | harvests of sorrow have Tie. | of the study be >k. There will be specIn my garden is a sigh - to make the ial music. Mrs Andrew Crandal will tieart glad. Row upon row in great lead the devotions for the afternoon precision of leafy green, variegated Mrs. Byron W il=on will bring us a

enough to distinguish many varieties of promised fruitage. This is only excelled in beauty by tlv riotious colors of well arranged flowers which furnish a border to add beauty to utility. Why yonder workman diligently toiling in my garden with set face and tired hands? Thes. are they who pay the price of constant vigilance that beauty and order may prevail. Let these workmen fail and scar upon -car will appear until beauty will first \ ’jo stifled and then give place to uglines- an.) neath. Some way the human i heart is like my garden. The seeus of kindness, truth, and love grow there in great abundance and beauty, - etema. vigilance js the price to he pai.t ie«t they he stifled by death, deception and lust. A character of

Tellur \((dresses IndicHkt I . (Juh

n-eu t e exercise n.ost mete the bleachers and applaud,”

men who he said.

Individual aggressiveness in the - hnla-tic field is equally emphasized in contrast with the customs in America, the speaker said. The system whereby no one is required to attend lectures places the responsibility di-

rectly on the shoulders of the student. r stadium at Oxford j w j, ere j t i*qongs, he said.

HI P\l U PROFESSOR S IN TRAMI RAI. SP(iRTS AT OX-

FORD \HK "I'l ( F<s

A million

university would lie as useless as free wheeling on a bobsled, for there are no “bleacher athletes” there.

KEFl >E> J \PANESF. Ml*

PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS

HAWK M 1N > ntiHI INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 2 (UPi— Kenneth S. Hauk, former teacher and athletic poach at Merrillville high school, won his fiirht to regain his teaching licer.s, in Indiana, in a ruling today by superior Judge William

A. Pickens

Hauk sued the state board of Edu-

cation seekiiiL revocation of the or- Miss Almeda Pitchford, ea*t Frank der banning him from teaching in the lin street, has returned home *rom state The Board's order was based business trip to Chicago,

upon Hauk'- sentence to the State

message from the convention held in Washington D. C. which discussed “The Cause and Cure For War.” Every member is urged to be present The Mary P^ed group will be the

hostess

++++++ Crescent Club To # Meet Wednesday The Crescent Club will meet at the home of Mrs. J. C. Trembly, East Washington street, Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. ++++++ Mrs. Herod Hostess Monday Afternoon The Monday Club met Monday afternoon with Mrs. J. W Herod at her home on Elm street. seventeen members and two guest-

LEAPS FROM MOVEMENT INDIANAPOLIS Feb 2 HPi A man tentatively iflentified a Sylvester Sammons, Mptristown. leaped to his death from the historic Soldiers and Sailor- monument in Monument Circle here today. The victim’s body was impaled on | a statue several feet from the ground. A hook and ladder tire squad was called to remove the , body. Attendants said the man fell 225 feet. Sammons was editor of the Morristown Sun until about siv months ago.

followed by tireles

beauty grow- from careful planting; to ro l 1 0311 with comi< ’ val '

! entines. Mrs. Leslie Hamaker had charge of the program and gave two I readings “Short Valentine Stories," and “The Passing of the Old Year.”

(ultivation.

SOWER.

were enjoyed. 1 -ervei refreshments.

! Both

The ho-tess

Prof. William A. Telfer. professor of English literature at DePauw university, told the In ana University Club in Indianapolis yesterday that "It was somewhat of a -li-appoint-ment to sc- fat men -ittin? in the bleachers applauding » e 1 carm back to this country.” “Everyone participates in sports at Oxford,” Prof, Telfer said. “The common -i;t * here of a sprinkling of student in the stands during prac -,-s-ions of football teams is un ieard of over there. Intramural sport- an ,ng the various

j Farm on a cLoge 0 f contributing to delinquency of a high school girl

colleges of Oxford is cess. Our system her sands sit in the -tat d efforts of a few me*' is, I believe, far tes it is not particularly The trend of deveb,

,-an education:

distinct «uc-

'•by thou-

and watch the it on the field desirable, but

ir fault.”

nent in Amer-

.-titutions

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 2, (UP)— A policeman and two pretty nur-e-were needed to subdue Fong Choy, 30, liefore he would allow Walter Iraiki, Japanese interne, to ~et his broken leg and hip.Taken to a hospital after an automobile acciiient, Choy burst into a stream of native epithets when Ikaiki • administered forcibly. Reviving, Choy surveyed the repaired leg with favor. He pointed to Ira , iki. "Him pretty g'iwi,” said Choy, “Maybe go to school in China, 'uih?"

INDI \N \POl.lS LIVES lot K

responsible for the attention on one team a few men. Prof. Telfer university, with •-everal

entity in. itself, provide -etting for intramural sp the col leg,-- and oniversitie can not develop, he said.

“The impressing thing

lege athletics in Amerra

MINER P \NS -«2.:.0 HOLD PIECES FROM STREAM

BIDWE1X BAR, Cal, (UP)—To find gold dust or nuggets is not so

largely unusual. To find gold minted and mcemration of ready for the bank is something e!-e

composed of aid. Oxford ! ■ dleges, each >- a natural 'ports which

over here

: bou t ■ thai

colthe

1. A. Brigg-, miner had that ex-

perience here recently.

He was panning for geld in the river. Noting something bright in h - pan, he discovered that he had “mined” two #2.',0 gold piece-, one dated 1847 and the other 1851. It is believed that some early day

H-.v receipts 4.000; holdovers 154. DiO lbs., up steady to 5 cents lower than Monday’s best prices Underweights steady to 25 cents higher. 100 to 225 lb=.. >4.35; to $4.40 : 225 to 250 I! $4.15 t..‘?4.25; 250 to 300 lbs., >3.J)., to .>4.0.•; 300 ibs., up, $3.6a to $3.x5; 140 to 160 lbs., $4 to .<4.25; lOo to no lbs., $5.50 to $3 75; packing ,-owi > ‘ii) to $3.25; few $3.50. Cattle 1,300, calves 500. Limited action on .- e stock around steady. Steer train- und'-veloped. some above |$7.5® Moat >2 75 to $3.50. pra | th at top $4; heifers $3.25 to $5.50;

ivealers steady $:» down. Sheep re.ejpt- 2.100 Early lamb ; trade strong t-> higher. Two decks SO lb. westerns 6 50; other fed westfirm ar< ..n i that figure.

Mr- - tte (ireg | .f this city. ha= g ne to Chicago for a visit with

her son, Harry Gregory.

Mr. and Mrs. Gregg Buis and fam-

ily spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.

R. E. Reeves in India’ ipolis.

++++++ Mrs. Stoner To Be Hok.e-> Thursday The Country Reading Club will meet with Mrs. C. S Stoner at her home on Rioomingtor street, Thurs day afternoon at 2 o’clock. + d* + + + *!• Auxiliary To Meet Wcdm -day The regular meeting of the Earl

Fisk auxiliary will be held Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock in the American Legion hall.

++++++

American Legion Auxiliary

Maple Heights revi-. 1 services are W ill Meet This Evening

• • 1

•, ■ 7 Mrs. I their n$ John Auee of Rniz.il ill lie present i mglit at 7:30 o’clocl in th*’ legion

R()4D BIDS OPENED INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 2, (UP)— &i is on road projects aggregating nearly $2,000,000, were opened by the state highway commission today. Two of the projects and low bidders

AVOID THE PENALTY Auto Licenses Are Due—Your Poll Tax Must Be Paid IF IT’S MONEY YOU NEED SEE US ,Ve Will Loan You Up To $300.1)0

—On—

FURNITURE

AUTOMOBILES LIVE STOCK IMPLEMENTS ETC Repayment Terms

To Suit

Each individual

Indiana Loan Co.

244

F. Washington >1.

Phone 15

Roa.» 36, from road 43 to Groveland, 8 5 miles of 20-foot pavement in Putnam county, M. B. Putnam Company, Fort Wayne, $101,325.47. p nd 36, from Montezuma to R x • v ir-i'--, 8.2 miles of 20-foot pavem nt and construction of an overhead railroad bridge west of Montezuma, in Parke and Vermillion counties, M. B. Putnam Company, Fort Wayne, $132,256.82.

FOR SALE—40 or 80- acre improved -Earm. See Guy O’Hair, three miles north. 2-4-2p

FOR RFNT—Two modern furnished rooms and kitchenette, al«o garv Phom 248 L. )-.’ ts

666

666 Liquid or Tablets used internally and 666 Salve externally, make a complete and effective treatment for Colds. , IS* i $5,000 in Cash Prizes \sk Vour Druggist for Particulars

For the next ten days Little Valentine pictures, 10 for 50 cent?. Cam-29-«t,

mack’s’ Studio.

See the "Bean Town Choir" by the Third Ward P. T. A. Thursday night, February 4, at 7:45 o’clock, in high school auditorium. General admis. sinn, 25c and 15c. A limited number of reserved seats, fSc, at the Hirt Electrical Shop. j.2t s

We have for delivery Now, Deep Vein, ti-inch

block and 3\6 furnace size coal

At the lowest possible price For High Grade Coal.

A. J. DUFF

Phone 317.

tonight.

O. H. MrNary, for.: er county agent here, was given a two year contract in Pulaski county. Mr. McN’ary is betinning his seventh year as county agent of that county

In the suit on note of John W. Bea man and others against O W. Raikes and others, a judgment in favor o^ the plaintiff in the sum of $297.04 has been rendered in the Putnam circuit court.

A daughter, Nancy Vas»ar, was born to Mr. and Mr-. Galen S Irwin of Roachdale at Culver hospital in Crawford-sville, Monday. Mrs. Irwin formerly was Miss Mary Elizabeth

( \RD OF THANKS

“We w i-■: to extend our sincere j Hills of Crawfonlsville.

thanks and appr -ciation to our friends for kindness an i sympathy shown u> during the death of our father. W:l-

miner in this old gold ic, p st Um 1

A finding of $130 in favor of the plaintiffs has been returned in cir-

cuit court in the suit on note of I^slie i Cloverdale Girl C. Bri ther- and Z**fa B. Burkett, ex- W.ds Quincy Man

hall.

+ •{• + + + -J Tri-Angle Club To .Meet Wednesday The Tri-Angle club will meet Wednesday evening at 7:30 o’clock with Miss Clara Lucile Conklin, at the parsonage. + 4- + 4- + + Modern Priscilla Club Held Business Meeting The Modem Priscilla club held a -hort business meeting Monday after noon at the home of Mrs. J. C. Brothers. Eighteen members were present. + + 4- -b + + Eastern Star To Meet Wednesday Greencastle chapter No. 255 O. E. S. will meet in regular se>~inn Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4*

NOTICE

We have purchased the Marshall Grain Company’s seed cleaning equipment and are operating a Feed and Seed store • in the Kocher building on North Jackson street under the management of Robert Allen formerly with Marshall Grain Co. We will appreciate your Patronage. MILLER GRAIN COMPANY.

Beauty and Charm School Conducted By MISS CHARLOTTE STROUD ST. LOUS. MO.

jpeutor- of the estate of Milton T. "Bowers* deceased, ^ Albert F.

(fVipe. *

; *r. G Bromley Oxoam, president

-

| f<»re the Cmwfordsville Rotary dub , at it noon luncheon Wednesday. Dr • Oxnam whl talk on Japan and is expected to discuss the situation that

now exists in the far east.

Expert Cosmetician and Personal Representative of

MARTHA LEE

i Os ar B. Linley filed suit in circuit i^'Urt Tuesday against Bernard B. Btoa .street, to collect an alleged un- . |»aid note ar.d to foreclose a chattel mortgage on a restaurant and fixtures with which the note was -ecured A demand of $516.34 i- made. Gillen A-

Ly«n are attorneys for the plaintiff.

Creatorand Manufacturer of the Exquisite 'Line of

Martha Lee Toiletries

> Henry Jackson, a to* 52 years, of tine, Texas, an alleged mail | t leif, was taken from the comity jail

I to Terre Haute Monday, by federal

As a specia ;o tesy to this institution arid complimenting the women of our ( . MARTHA El.i. as mitted us to utilise‘the services of one of her Cosmeticians for five days only FEBRUARY 2 TO FEBRUARY 6 (INCLUSIVE)

- iwait rraignment in fed- • eral court on a charge of having stole-, a pair of shoes from a parcel j post pac kage at the Mcmon railroad

here some time ago.

:

Examine^ from the state board of

-Iaccounts are in Putnam county gomg

•I over

We would mi •-t that ^ou make your appointment now for a ’•kin Analysi- and I rench Pack facial W ith th*M- -**riires, (i n a private booth arranged fi.r thi purimee). you will la given a personal lecture on— •

Proper treatment and care of your particular skin. Blending of powder and rouge; and the selection of shades most becoming and suitable for vour type. The new and charming ari of "Personality Make-Up." H< w to obtain and keep a lovely skin.

Please Make Your KeservaliolL Early

Phone 19 or 316.

MULLINS’ DRUG STORE

♦ j'>f f « X "1-, John V. Foster, of Tj Spencer, ,t work in th>- ♦ ; county office-; i n courthouse, while

4 : ’ * ' B okx of county of x|fice older* ire nspectod annually. ^ Mr- L0.4E Mayfield, age 70 year-, XI wife , Romeo Mayfield, died at her t) tome near Brazil Sunday. She was a f former resident o' Quincy but had re- ♦ ! sided in Clay county for 34 years. A X 'laughter and four -,ns also survive. Funeral *ervi< held from the Quin*y M. E. church Tuesday morning with interment in the Coombs

♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦ ««oeee»»«♦ «»»♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦»»♦♦♦♦»♦ 1 ceTVtery near Quincy.

Mrs. marrige of Miss Clara Jane McKee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pjyd U Jrf e,\ of Klyveriale, and -! t Wtg. E Nitw it^h, ».>i est Mr. and Mrs. Ju Ison Newm.tfY, of Quincy, took place at Gosport Saturday with the Rev. William A. Hartsaw, pastor of the M. E. church officiating. The ceremony was witnessed by Mr. and

Mr-. Je- H:irt> »w

The bridgegroom is a railroad employe at Quincy while Mrs. Newman’s father is a jeweler. Both are well known in south Putnam county.

1- 4- 4- + ♦ ♦

Mrs. Vernon Sigler

HoM:ss Friday

The Clinton and Mad is m Township Home Economics club met at the home of Mrs. Vernon Sigler, Friday afternoon, Jan. 22, at 2 o’clock. Mrs. James Tabor assisted the hostess. There were sixteen members and five guests present and all enjoyed the meeting. The hostess serve i delicious

refreshments.

Officers for the coming year were elected as follows: Mrs. Robert Dills, president; Mrs. Thomas Holland, vice president; Mr-. ,Ru->el| O’Haver, secretary and treasurer, an Mrs. Mary Wright, corresponding secretary

4- 4- 4- + + 4Girl Reserves Met Monday

The regular meeting of the Girl Reserves was held Monday evening at < 7 o’clock in the Presbyterian church. A short business session was held after which Marjory Mumane gave a very interesting talk on the topic ‘‘Loyal to Friends.” The sophomore and junior girls held a discussion "Personal Hygiene’’ with Miss Mary Agnes Miller in charge, while the senior girls were led in a discussion by Miss Alvord cn the topic “Home \djustments." 'Hie Girl Keserves are featuring one

OPENING Special

PERMANENT WAYINL

$6.50

EUGENE

FREDERIC VITA-TONIC

SHELTON

JOUE JEANNE’S DUKADENE

$5.00

| $4.00

CECIL’S BEAITY SALON

V one as lie Theater Bldg.

Phone 336-N

itr an

roi «4 or i

WJt All

* aaa>

Wc Sell them for 89c; Other Stores Get a Dollar

rhey are aplendld chenille rugs very firmly woven of such fine materials you will recognize them aa the beat quality. Orchid, Blue. Hose «reen. are the colors -all dainty shades suitable for bedroom or bath. Of course, they are washeble, and the size Is 24x36. At only 8* each they provide good reason* for pretty bed room or bathroom floor*.

HORACE LINK & CO.

i The Slore of Furniture

HU**

sun Sut *l coaatHn edaad

To

short li SurvtJtJ fitting i north in

” n