The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 July 1932 — Page 6

THE DAILJ BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, JULY 15,1932.

JULY SPECIALS FROM OUR BASEMENT Greatest Values We Have Offered In Twenty Years.

PEPPFiRELI. SHEETS, 81x89 at this special price of CQf* Each

l.oomcraft BRO VIM LOTH slips Whites and Pinks, All OC#% sizes. Special CwC

« Bleached seamless SHF2KTS size 81 x 90 39 C

29c PEPPERKLL 1 1 BING. 36, 10 and 12 width 4 Q Special — Yd 1 W C

BLEACHED MUSLIN, Yard Wide—Special Yard 9C

9-1 PEPPIRFI.L SHEETING Bleached Special 4 Yard 1 wC

LADIES’ H ATS. ( lean up of Season OC#* Basement . . £ w W

29c PILLOW ( Pepperell, Special 4 Q _ Each 1 wC

Excellent PILLOW CASKS Special at 1 Each 1 UC

Large HATH TOM ITS, Size 20 x 10 Cannon Towels Q _ Special—Each OC

Standard SILK THREAD, All Colors, Now Priced at O #* Spool OC

BROW \ LL Ml SLIN, 36 inches wide, special O 1 Yard W 2 C

5 Yds. 18 inch, all Linen ST EVENS 4 Q _ UR \SH

S. C. PREVO COMPANY HOME STORE

Motor Fuel Tax Bill In House

Scene at Coney’s Two Million Dollar Fire

WOULD RAISE HALF MILLION DOLLARS ANNUALLY IS CLAIM OF AUTHOR

TRY A BANNER CLASSIFIED FOR RESULTS

INDIANAPOLIS, .luly 15, <UP)Into a hopper heaped with scores of more or less controversial revenue measures ,a bill proposing to rai^” j an estimated half million dollars i year by the simple expedient of putting teeth into an existing statute was introduced in the house toda\ b\ Representative John F. Ryan, Deni.. Terre Haute. A new “motor vehicle fuel tax law,” taxing any motor fuel, however blended with gasoline, kerosene, naptha or benzol, backed by provisions to obliterate bootlegging activities, was placed before the house at the behest 'f Floy 1 E. Williamson, state au litor whose office is charged with enforcement of the existing ar-t. Ryan points out that although mo tor vehicle fuel furnishes the stat< vith its greate.-t revenue, provisions ior enforcement are so impotent that [ bootlegging has flourished in defiance of all constituted authority, despite efforts to bring the[ criminals to jus- | tice. | Support of botn Republican and ; Democratic leaders is claimed for the j measure. The proposal follows the old statute | m general details. It digresses only J in that it provides a brand new set of “teeth.” the need for which i- ; shown by the absence of a single criminal prosecution as the result of J numerous investigations of known J bootlegging activities. Ryan’s bill would: 1. Obligate auditor to investigate ill applicants and post sufficient bonds. 2. Require dealers to keep books and preserve them for three years, such records to be open to examina-

Here are some of the 200,000 bathers that were stampeded by the disastrous blaze at Coney Island, New York, helplessly watching while firemen battled to subdue the conflagration. Many of those who were at the resort when the Are started were compelled to return home in their bathing suits, their clothes havng been lost in the fire. More than 1,000 vear-round

residents of the resort are rendered homeless by the blaze which destroyed more than 200 buildings, with a total loss of approximately $2,000,000. Every piece of fire apparatus in Brooklyn was employed in fighting the fire, which injured 21 firemen and 200 others. Small panel above shows some of the injured receiving treatment.

tinn.

3. Authorize the state to demand

applicants to perjury laws

7. Make d ;il"rs liable for embezzlement of public funds in event

on 3i .th from dealer subjecting them of fail(lre tf) pav tk , tax moneys t0 ‘.Ir r"!!!!! 8 C0ntempt in | collected from motorists, by making

uch fees trust funds, the property of

event of false swearing.

4. Authorize the -late to file a re- i turn from available information, for uny dealer failing to submit one. 5. Authorize the state to attach j dealers’ goods, garnishee their bank accounts, aci >unts receivable, etc., in ! filing suits upon license fees, or upon | the bonds, thus avoiiing long dela>s|

in obtaining judgment-.

*>. Pla-e applications, -tatements and refund under oath, subjecting

the state. 8. Prohibit delivery of motor vehicle fuelr,. ex opting by special permit, between !) p. m. and 5 a. m.. and 9. Require exhibit of placards showing that li en.-e foe is included in price to consumer.

BRITISH \\ \\ I SOUND KISSES LONDON. (UP) — Whatever the

radio people of some countries may do to stimulate the sound of a kiss in front of the microphone, the British Broadcasting Company allows only the real article in its studio. So refined has 'he art become, indec that the company, for accuracy’s iko, has listed human osculations |thus: The impassioned, paternal, avuncular, platonic, brotherly, convention- | al an i the kiss-and-run. I he producer of any particular play is theoretically privileged to dictate what sort of a kiss is to be given, but sometimes the actors “ad lib"—or sh mid one say, “ad lip”?

FINAL TONIGHT “Hollywood Speaks” GRANAm SATURDAY AFTERNOON AND NIGHT — 10c — j-, r

EXTRA \DDKD "CHIC" SALE AND ANIMAL CARTOON Starts Sunday “SOCIETY GIRL’

nun uary

That’s why wore and more Smokers

are changing to Chesterfield every day

VITHEN you are smoking a lot of ~ ’ cigarettes every day, you natural* ly want a mild cigarette, and smokers try Chesterfields and find out that they are milder and taste better. Then smokers tell other smokers— “one smoker telling another”—that they find that although they smoke a great many Chesterfields during the day, they never tire of them; and that they have found out that Chesterfield is a milder cigarette, that it is a cigarette that tastes

better, that it is a cigarette with a most pleasing aroma. Some time ago, in a Chesterfield advertisement, there was a statement, “A $90,000,fM)0 Reason,” and this means that the larger part of $90,000,1)00 is invested in the right kind of ripe, mild Domestic and Turkish tobaccos to make sure that Chesterfields are milder and taste better. May we ask you to try them?

Alva Monroe, son of Henry ant Almira P Try was boin in Marion tc.cnship, Putnam county. Dec. 31, 1852. and died in the Potnam county hospital Jul> 10, 1932 it the age years six months md 9 days. He was third in a family of ple\ei] children, all of whom nave prec* 1 IC him in death •■xcept three si-ter;, Florence and Janie S ott of Fillmore Etta Cooper of Coffeen, lllin ml one brother. Sh ilium C., of iwesacastle. He unite! with the Pethel D'pt'i' | church when a young man, and Has jalways been faithful and true to rii church. “Doc. ’ as we all krex him best, was a man who lover! the quietness cf his h ’me. As a ho> and then a « man. he ado:ei hi mother, wished it had 1 een pi - ibl to have krp‘ er in his home always. He spent hi- entire life in Ma n township, having lived on a 1 m southeast of Fillmore until 19D> v on he ami his si-'er moved to Filin re These txo have always lived in ' same home. When the sister, Jacich home was broken their doors were cpFnel wi le for her. As we pay honor to the on- in whose memory we are here toda\ ws will meditate for our good on the life of our friend. We ran truthfully ,pay him as great a compliment as can be given any man when he 'as finisheil his course- that he w a good man. He lived a clean, nv al. upright life, was a good cit-en, neighbor and brother, true in all the relations of life and in the sigh' of God. Although hr may have lived humbly and simply, he had live athe Man of Galilee would have us ve, If we could take an inventor, of his life we would find he had an abundance of faithfullness, trustfulness and contentment. He was ever fai hful to family and friends, always true to everv truit given him and greatest of all he had contentment. His heart was happy, his greetings always cheerful. Bes'de these sirteis and hi other, he .eaveo two sisters-in-law, one brother-in-law, meres, nephews, many other friends and relatives. We can truthfully ; ay with the poet: He beared not the hidden purpose Of that Power which alone is giest N->r the myriad world, his shadow. Nor the Silent Opener of the gate

MAN BfTTEX BY RATTLER SAYS IT WAS ONLY A SUNG OAKDALE, Cal. (UP)—A rattler’s bite means nothing to Henry Storkslager. construction employe. While working on the Hetch He' chy water project, Str.ckslager f* 1 something on his right ankle. H* reached down and brushed at his foC When he returned to camp, he fellow workers something had stung him. Medical examination proved he had been bitten by a rattlesnake l Stockslager neither saw nor heard the snake.

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