The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 July 1932 — Page 4
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1932.
JULY SALE
W e mention here only a few of the many Bargains we are offering in our
JULY SALE
5 yards of Stevens
Ml linen
TOWKLING, Special
18 inch 49c
Rleacht'd Ml SI.IN Yard " ide
5c
(Genuine I’epperell SHEKTS, Xl\9!t ^i/c, lorn A 59C
hemmed. Special lia.
Misses' \NKLKTS, plain colors (Easement) 4 Qc
Pair
Hath TOWELS Special—Do/..
59c
Strictlv all 100% wool
ics s\\ im si ITS
all colors. uit
l.ad-
$1.50
I’epperell PILLOW si/e I2\3(> Spc‘cial
Each
( ASKS 19c
Sheer summer DRESSES ....
house ’T
79c
Extra lar«e 20x10 TOW I I 8, Special Each
Hath
(tiiarai.teed fast color broad-
cloth SHIRTS, plain
and fancy patterns
Loon v Lake, j j n ; ts 0 p era tion8 throughout the
Levantine underworld, the dru(f rinn
CATPiSH TOOK SIESTAS ! English director of the Egyptian eenIN OLD TIRE CASINGS tral narcotics intelligence bureau, cost
I Nafei (and four accomplices) a five-
SPOKANL, (LP)—The used tue y ear sentence and a heavy fine. | industry is in for a big boom. |' with thp >kin(f . s fall> there crumb . Now Vou can catch catfish "''’h '’hi | e( j on( . () f mofI t amazing and brip tires - * jliantly organized -muggling rings in This was discovered by 1-eo Daliltn thp history of (lr ttg traffic,
and Bill McCluskey at ' ■ • - '
the other day.
The pair spent several hours on thej" J jts wn " sh ips. camel trains” arm" lake fishing for catfish- Fhey return- , motor cars, and even airplanes. In ed empty-handed. \ | Cairo it had chemical laboratories, Some tires. Tianging alongside the Kamb | |n(? c , ubs and wonderful villas houseboat, swished in the lap of the |he outsklfts of th p t . itywaves as if to intimate they had a Nafei, the brains and leader of the secret to reveal-that they were used outfjti has ha(j ., g in i 8ter and r e mark . for something else besides absorbmg, ^ caroer hpean life as a jun . the shock of mooring boats. ior offit . iH , in th e Egyptian State They hauled up the tires and gazed HailwavSi but S(l0n foun ,i the path 0 f inside the casings There, was a single too irks , )in(> . Becoming involved
catfish to each tire.
The catfish hunt food by night and sleep by day, thus their appearance in
the casing.
CURE FOR UNUSUAL FEVER DISCOVERED
LANSING, Mich- (UP)— After 17 years of study. Dr. I. Forest Huddle-
son, of Michigan State College, ha* smuggling operations, discovered a cure for undulant taver ^ rjng k t larKt> auppliea He developed the cure last year, but ((ril>fs in the wrpfk of
withheld announcement pending tur-
with a gang of international criminals, he found it necessary to seek re-
ifuge in Syria.
There he began the smuggling activities which b'd to his being exiled ! during the wa to Malta. After five years there, lie returned to Egypt (with a large -urn of money at his .command, and quickly organized his
awarded by the government to a priv- siderable according to present plans, ate operator under the Kelly Air Mail but government officials were said to
Act of 1925, the law which started the establishment of a network of air mail lines which now extend to all parts of the country. Growing out of an experiment, ,air mail has become a necessity in the transaction of the
nation’s business and its importance is as well recognized as that of the telegraph or the long distance telephone in the handling of transactions in which time is a vital element.
feel the expenditure was justified in that it probably would etmi once and for all the long struggle between the sect and the authorities regarding its right to parade in the nude and to refuse schooling offered by the gov-
ernment.
IMPORT A ME OF PASTURES emphasized by bulletin “Economic Utilization of Imnd for Pasture in Southern Indiana” is the ' title nf a bulletin issued recently by
UHUR( H HOLDS ALL DAY
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION I t be p urdue Agricultural Experiment
COLUMBIA, O., (UP)—The con-1 station,
gregation of the Columbia Baptist 'p b( , economic importance of pasturChurch, recently celebrated its lOOth ea on Indiana farms is emphasized in anniversary with an all-day program-1 this publication. The value of pastur-j TRo noiaKi-atinn onntiniu>d thrnmrh- S j n maintaining soil fertility, '
■Iti inch Brown ^ ^ g* MUSLIN. Special Yd. ^2'-
Men’s 2'ic silk ami rayon SOX, Fancy 1 9C
Pattern- Pair
Caacv .* . t
S. C. PREVO COMPANY
HOME STORE
ther tests. The fever, diagnosed first in 1H86, is most prevalent in South Europe and Northern Africa. Its early symptoms are similar to those of influenza. Temperatures range upward of 105 degrees. While seldom causing death n America, it often leaves the afflkte I person with serious nervous disorders. Dr. Huddleson effects his cure by intra-musdar injections of brucellin, a serum made from byproducts develo]>ed in the body of those afflicted.
ARTK I K RECALLS MISHAP; SHOWS SAILOR QUITE CURED
FALL RIVER, Mass.. (UP) —A local newspaper carried an item recently recalling the ill-fated voyage of the schooner Hiram Smith, which left here in December, 1865, and lost her
captain and two men Cape May. N. J.
in a storm off
Heihert !.. Hart of Buffalo, N. Y-, whose father, David, was one of the survivois of the crew, noted the item. He informed the newspaper that his father never went to sea again and live j to he 96.
NEAR EAST DRUG KING OUTWITTED BY ENGLISHMAN CAIRO. Egypt., (UP) Mohamed Mustapha Nafei, king of the drug smugglers in the Near East, ha- gone where he never expected his fantastic career to lead him—to jail. Losing a long duel of wits with Major-General T. W. Russell Pasha,
Take Advantage NOW of A&P’s Outstanding SUMMER FOOD FESTIVAL
SLICED
OR HALVES
DAINTY SALTED
Butter'A S T E umz" B em°N K T s LB 21 c Country Roll Cigc/irettes 4 DelfMonte Peaches
Soda Crackers Coifidor Coffee
Peaches Encore
Cigarettes Potato Chips
CHURN FRESH
.. 20c $1.15
LARGE f iC/» NO 2'a CAN | V*
TINS
OF FIFTY
FROM HIGH IN THE ANDES
IONA GRAND NO
MACARONI SPAGHETTI. NOODLES
A OZ PKGS
PALL JONES AND WINGS
FRESH CRISP
. 15c 29c 27c 25c < 95c t39c
J
BLUE RIBBON
BUDWEISER HLATZ
OLD MUNICH. HOF SUPERB
Gr# d Luck Margarine
Milt V/alt
Hiller High Life Malt ‘ialad Dressing rajah
(Jill Pickles
/8 o'Clock Coffee /Red Circle Coffse
Bokar Coffee Rolled Oats
EVEN SIZE
ECONOMY 55 OZ PKG
MORE GREAT VALUES!
25C White House Milk Tall Can. 2 for 9 ( . Kidney Beans 8ultana can {jq Ginger Ale yukon club 24 oz box |0c Beverages assorted sodas 2 n « ° z IOc Olives ENCORE PLAIN QT J A f 25C Grape Juice * * ^ 2 PT BOTS 25c Ketchup QUAKER MAID t4 OZ BOT |QC Pen-Jel sure jell 3 oz pkg I5c CertO SURE JELL BOTTLE 26C Mason Jars o TS 007 79c '•ints doz 69c
49c 29c 43c 25c IOc I9c
23c 27c
IOc
FINEST QUALITY MEATS
Hams Bacon
Beef
Kingan Bt-li.ihlt-W hole or ' j Lh. Lran stiuar nirrd. »holr L Fre.h ground. No ( p r eal, Lh.
Beef Boast < h< i<-.->i.ung
Ik f. !jb.
F’ork Roast
Lb. . .
Baby Haddock, Lb.
15c
12ii
10c lie
12k
10c
FRESH FRUIT AND VEGETABLES
New Corn Potatoes
Cantaloupes
Swert Tender
Lars, Do*. * * 1 s. No. t 91 r Peck At 11 Home 3 25C
grown fo
.Michigan Celery p (ireen ueans, 3 Lbs. Beets „ . 2
Hunches
10c 10c 5c
THE GREAT
Atlantic* Pacific
TEA CO.
of
drugs in the wreck of an old ship in the K'd Sea; these were brought to Kgypt across the desert by a tribe of Bedouin Arab- Nafei also paid large sums to current .soldiers and policemen, and had a fiendish skill in implicating respectable men in his opetations; once he had compromised them, he used them mercilessly as his tools He had countless aliases and addresses, and was careful never to wiite a letter in his own hand for fear of giving a due to his identity.
The celebration continued through out the day, beginning with the morning worship. Sunday school was held followed by a basket dinner. In the afternoon, services were resumed with the reading of letters from pastors unable to he present. The history of the church was read- s In the evening several sjteakers were heard. Special music was offered at all gatherings during the day and evening, a choir of 20 voices l>e-
ing the feature
ISLAND PRISON Will HOI SF, NUDE FANATICS
TO OPEN CAMPAIGN AG \INST ABE I.IMOI.N “BEBUNKEKS”
FORT WdNK. Ind., (UP)—A campaign “t<> debunk Abraham Linoln’s debunk- ha- been announced here by Dr. I >ui> A. Warren, director of the Lincoh National Life Foundation. Ml he ‘debu'i-dng’ of Lincoln began in the 1860 ' ampaign and many of (he irrespon- d- tories circulated at that time hav<- lived until now, and lost none of t < ir sensational aspects dining the jaars,” Dr. Warren said. “Hi graphy should he based on facts and not on fk lion. “For exa '|de, many historians have iTiosp exaggerated the purported defic ncies in character of Lincoln’s father, Thomas Lincoln. They have spoken of him as ‘an idler, trifling and a rover’; as an ‘ignorant, shift I* 1 .- - vagabond'; and as ‘without ambition for himself or his children.’ “New it so happens that the Lincoln National Life Foundation is i reeling in Fort Wayne this summer an he.oil hronze tatue of ‘Abraham Lincoln, i a Hoosier Youth.’ It is the work • ' Paul Manship, famous New York and Paris sculptor, and portrays Li oln as a youth of 21, just befoie !u accompanied his father on the trip to New Salem. 111. “No j irtures of Lincoln at this period are a\ liable and so Mr. Manship and I ■ ug deep into the records of I,ini oln' uth, and particularly into all available record.- of Thomas Lincoln, to determine how the boy Lincoln mu.-t have appealed when he rived the Indian frontier. “We di-overel that Thomas Lin- < >ln was a scended from a long line of illustrious citizens and patriots, tint the lancoln family was held in high i teem in Revolutionary days.”
VICTORIA B. C. (UP)—The Douk hobors. fantastic religious sect, who have long troubled and embarrassed Canadian officials, will have a special prison all their own to house 581 members of the -ect, convicted of a recent disorder in which they attempted one of their famed nude marches. Construction of the prison, located on Piers island, is now under way.
The wholesale arrest of the sect members was one of the largest ever undertaken. and marked the most dras-
es in maintaining soil fertility, in preventing erosion of hilly fields, and in furnishing cheap feed for livestock has long been recognized. In spite of this, however, survey of pasture practices in southern Indiana shows that pastures generally have been neglectid and relegated to land too poor or hilly for efficient crop production. The data presented in this bulletin lead to the conclusion that the first consideration in planning feed productoin on southern Indiana dairy farms should be to. provide sufficient acre-
age of good quality pasture.
In this study, faims with half of the land in pasture and half in crops Were found to be more profitable thaiy those farms which devoted only one-fourth of the land to pasture and three-fourths to crops. This is accounted for in part by the fact that pasture furnished feed to livestock at one-fourth the cost of other feed, hence the costs on farms with ahund-!
ant pasture were lowered.
The pasture crop is becoming more Important in Indiana as high costs for machinery, fertilizer and labor continue in the face of extremely low prices for grain. An important
tic action yet carried out against the adjustment on many farms throughorganization. I out Indiana at this time may be made The Doukhobors gained world by an increased use of land for pas-
wide attention by their practice of marching naked across the Canadian plains as a demonstration against rulings of Canadian officials, or when commanded to do so by their religious
leaders.
Sixteen large frame buildings will I)|. erected on the island, with wingleading from a -ingle corridor, enabling t single guard to patrol an entire dormitory. The men will have double tieied hunks for sleeping quarters, while the women will he
provided with single ots.
Eight of the (6 buildings will be dormitories, while the others will
ture with a corresponding adjustment in the livestock enterprises to make efficient use of a greater pas-
ture acreage.
Free copies of Bulletin No. 359 may
hr secured b> writing to Purdue University, Agricultural Experiment .Station, Lafayette, Ind.
FRENCH GOVERNMENT WARN JOBLESS YKI ERA NS
Tonite-“Panama f I <GilR!A\^A\ID ' » A T. MATINEE & NloJ I
ROCHELLE HUDSON In a blazing drama of ilg raw frontier!
BEYOND
THE
ROCKIES
The story of a ‘had man 1 hunter who had the lougli. cst job of his life hunimj down a bandit woman.'
CARTOON — ( OMKDV
Sunday, Ann Hardi “Westward Passaa
is bursting with gold • • :r • J convinced the American jobb
it is a new land of golden up; I
ity. The French government
viously given workers’ permiii J Ameri:un war veteran ' but tb I increase has caused the govtr i
to discontinue this favor
Now Americans are on t'ti footings as all foreigner- Thul no jobs for those who arrive v I have no money for their lepatr. The Legion has sent 38 fan I war veterans home this year r.d found work for all hut 22 nf' less veterans among th |><-rJ
American resilient;.
PARIS, (UP) The Fiench govern-
ment today appealed to the American The Legion estim.io <mt I legion to stem the flow of unemploy are 1,750 permanent N estiblfl ed American war veterans, who have ! families of Ameru.in letenrfi
serve a- lining t oms, cook houses, been attracted to Europe by reports France. Most of th"'"' ™tx'fe guard houses, and commissaries. I tnat franc is a land of employment situations or income- ut the I Wells will he dug to provide water, and plenty, only to learn upon theii less have failed to find ' rk ind an entire electric lighting sys- arrival that theie i- no work for fer- I a year of effort, fo this nu- I em will he installed | eignSr . been a ided 400 mwly at iv»d J Co.-t of the undertaking will be con- The stories that the Hank of France 1 ican jobless.
Society Leader And Home
AIRM \V- COMPLETES SIXTH ) I \R OF MAIL CARRYING NEW YORK. (UP)—On June 30, 1932, Am. ican Airways, Inc., pioneer air mail operators, completed six years of air mail service lietween the I cities of \''W,\«rk and Boston. During the first year of operation the 1 line i irried 6,631 pounds of mail. Dur■ng the ye ir just ended, 58,301 pounds 1 were carried. ^ This was the fir-t air mail contract
lie beautiful mansion of Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick <>n Lake Shore drive. Chicag from h, r father, John D. Rockefeller, which has been closed. At right. Mrs. McCormick, who h up residence in a Chicago hotel where, it is disclosed, she has liemi ordered by her physician and recuperate from the nervous condition brought "n by hei f nancial worries of the last year.
Riot At Marceilles, III.
1
f
One man was killed and twenty-oneothers wounded in a furious bate- tha juj p „ i(l Rivr , fp< j pral darn ,^ 0 i ect at Marseille;, •‘'1 Th. Ziotlg was n.i outgrowth of a labor feud of several weeks standing. Picture at left shows Sheriff E. J Welter (left) of Lj Sa’le 0 ; " yn •ion n,* H. w Miller corntricLon company buua.r.g the oa.r Group ph Ao at. right, left to right. Carl Zetn -n
ad ‘ J ”
Group photo at right,
h. stite pol
