The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 August 1932 — Page 4

* THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4,1032.

MISSES SCHOOL DRESSES

Finesl quality guaranteed prints in lhe newest patterns, print work and newest styles. Most of them are elbow, length sleeves. Some are hand embroideried..

They are dresses that formerly sold at SI. Make excellent school dresses, now on sale, all sizes.

55c

f 2 FOR $1.00

All Si.95 Li\dies Summer Sheer Frocks are now beini;closed out at ^0

ridiculous low prices. All styles I and sizes on s.vle at

S. C. PHEVO COMPANY

HOME STORE

CLARK NOMINATED

ST. LOUIS. Aup. 4 (UP)—Cof. | Bennett T. Champ Clark who a.-; a ' boy “took to politics like a duck to i water,” today appeared near the realization of a childhood ambition—• membership in congress where his j father, the late Champ Clark, ruled I for years as speaker of the house. Champ Clark predicted a political j career for his son after hearing him | deliver a political address at the age ' of 10. “That boy’s going to congress some i day”, the father declared“He takes to politics like a duck to water ” That was 312 years ago. Today at 42 | “that hoy” held the Democratic nom-

ftMarfcet?

INDMNAl*< »LIS LIVESTOCK

Hogs 5,000: holdovers 387; mostly 15 to 25 cents lower, botchers off most; 100 to 220 lbs.. $}.65 to $t.75; 220 to 250 lbs., $4.40 to $4.55; 250 to 280 Ihs., $4.10 to $4.30; 280 to 310 lbs., $3.80 to $4.00; 310 lbs. up, $3 65 to $3.75; 14o to 160 lbs.. $4.30 to $4.40; 100 to 140 lbs. '$4.00 to $4 20;

packing sow- $2.75 to $3.50.

Cattle receipts 700; calves 600; all classes scarce, no change of importance in price [>osition; hardly enough , steer- to make a market; load 750i lb. heifers $7 50; others mostly under j $7.00; beef caws 82.75 to $4 00; low

! ination for United States senator eu j ters an ,| miters $1.25 to $2.50;

from Missouri after a political battle that stirred \oters in the most remote sections. His victory in yesterday’s stato primary won for him the right to op pose Henry W. Kiel, Republican nominee, in the November general election for Junior United States Senator from Missouri. Clark fought the powerful Thomas J. Pendergast Democratic inditical machine of Kansas City to defeat its candidate, Charles M. Howell. Howell came out of Kansas City with a lead of more than 75 000 votes anil lost hi- advantage in almost every otiteprecinct in the -tate.

vealers steady $5.50 down. Sheei) 2,500: lambs around 50 cents lower; ewe and wethers largely $6.00; few $6.25; buck- $1 less; throwouts down to $3.00 and below.

cMSfRfepWW

HAiZEL LIVINGSTON

, cnpvitiioHr wi/ by kino matures syndicate. :nc.

„ WWTKK KJOT’Y-EHiHTj (.K/UMUt rend May met he$; at 'Et eet, in Oakland, i/ "AV’rfk +* night as well gn^and hare ■■■• breakfast," Raytfiond •aid- *W*Vo got plenty of (time. Ofb' fBncral isn’t till two o’c|>ok.” naymond did all the tailcing M’vt got the day off, of courss,” he “I figured it was only light. ’Pa, he would have come, tod, but fcrturals break him all up. You know how it is when the, get along. Hates to hear the wor J All the Lh®'' thinking he’ll he thej next one 'That’s pa. He’s cheerfc , and hi: health ain’t what you’l call bad but he’’ all the time th nking bn many years he’s got 1 Ift. 1 know him. You can t fooi Ue, eh.

May?”

“Yes, you’re pretty smart, J

agreed absently. “I

find it too difficult to cong out, Ijtly Lou. I hate to have youlspend t>,at much money, especially! when K turned out this way. D(fl you b rrow from Madame Nahlraan?” “No, she is still abroad jl bor-

rowed it from Dwight Gwinj’

Raymond wrinkled his fif ehead. "You don’t want to get unier any obligat i"ns to those fellows ^ f I.was you, Lily Lou, I’d pay that 1 fellow,

soon as you get back.” / “With what, Raymond? J

“Well, with the first mgney you

ty smart, ? May hope you (didn't

get. You’re working, areiet you?

“Yes, but I don’t make :g fortune, and living is so high—" ( “That’s just it,” May cuff in. “You

ought to come back to 11 in FranC’SCO. New York ian’t a(iy better. Iiene’s friend, I.efa, has i friend, a Mrs. Glensor, who studeii in New Y'ork for two years ’ltu-o years, mind you. Well, when Is he came back and went to stui^p with a teacher, named . . . what! WAS his name? Well, anyway, he! said they had ruined her voice in n ew York. She never did make anything of it, after all she spent. Sir's gelling real estate now, hut wi|h business

what it is . .

“Yes, it's a long,' ujfiill drag,"

Lily Lou agreed.

She thought about lit, sitting alone in the back -eat "flKaymond's car, as they drove ouij San Pablo Avenue, on the way to jWoodlake.

Bess had taken charge, of course. She was so busy bustling around making sure that there were chairs enough for everyone, that everyone’s children were out of mischief, and would stay clean “until it was all over” that she had time for nothing more than a hasty kiss and a “How are you, Lily Lou?” Mr. Stokes, the old minister, was there, and the minister’s wife and Mr. Fletcher, and Mrs. Burpee, and half a dozen others from the

church.

“I don’t know where we'll put them all when they all get here. I wish we'd planned to have the funeral in the church like 1 wanted,” Bess worried. “It was my idea from

hack the earth.

And when it was decently over, and they were driving back to the house, the women's voices becoming more natural again, not so whispery and solemn. The children, becoming less good. The soft fleshy smack of Bess’ hand cuffing Regina, who was asking if there would be ice cream and lemonade, both, “at the party.” And then everyone coming in to

the house for "coffee.” Bess hospitably urging everyone, even Rufe Fletcher's wife whom she hated* The heat of the kitchen. The sweaty, shiny face of the Schultz girl (so called because she had never married, '.hough she was

the firat, but dad would have it i nearly as old as mother had been)

here. He said mother would have liked it here. He was the last one in life to ever knw what she liked, and it worked out that way right to the end. Well! It’s all we can do now ... I wish he and Rufe Fletcher would come. Dad's been off by himself, or at Unde Eph's old place, ever since mother died. It's awfully

bending over the five gallon coffee pot Bess had borrowed from the

ladies' Aid.

Bess bringing in the baked ham from the cooler, whispering to the Schultz girl to see that everybody had potato salad and a hot biscuit. The minister's wife crooking her little finger elegantly, as she lifted

hard on the family to have to put her coffee cup, balancing her loaded

off a funeral for somebody coming plate on one bony knee, from the East. Look at that child! | After a while l.ily I.ou went and

Maybe it would have|been better if she had never triedfit. All the

chances she'd had, Ifiurope with Nahlman, Dwight Uiwpn’s lessons, Mefr pditan chorus, find dramatic • hm . 1 on Jr’s ,'patient help with Italian and Freso-h . . . and still miles from the god!. Still every chance in the world that she'd be just one more who tripd . . . It was a hot and tiresome drive, over the mountains, thsit smelled of sage and chaparral, giving up their spicy, aromatic sweertnesa in the hot. dusty wind that/blew straight from the sun. How different, how terribly different from the last time, thirteen months ago, when she and Ken . . . when she and Ken . . . May leaned over from the front seat. “Don't rry so, Lily Lou. You can't help things by feeling so bad. I’m sure we all fee! had to lose mother. But after all, she was fifty-eight. It isn’t as though she were younger—” Lily Lou wept heartbrokenly then. To think that the could have so far forgotten her mother as to cry over old memories, on the way to her mother’s funeral.

Regina, if you dirty yo\jr white

dress—”

Yes, I know it has been hard for you. Perhaps 1 shouldn't have come,” Lily Imo said. When the family gathered in the shed kitchen, and overflowed onto the bark and side porches, Idly I.- u went into the little front room to say goodbye to her mother. No one had thought to take her in. After all, she preferred to go a: u ,,r. They had mov ‘d out everything

slipped her hand inside dad’s homy one, the way she used to when she was a little girl. He hastily looked around, stretching his red, deeply wrinkled neck inside the unaccustomed white collar. When he saw that no one was looking their way he patted her dark head awkwardly,

mussing her hair.

“The others,” he said, “were like her. I always said you were more my side of the family, Dolly.” She said nothing, reflecting, be-

except the piano ... the golden oak cause he had called her “Dolly.’ 1 piano that had set ,',er feet on the It was years since he had. He had P * t h from which there was no called her that often, when she was turning now , , . little, and she could still remember 3 he Iiier was near the piano, her mother’s displeasure — because Back of it two rows of chairs, of Aunt Dolly, of course.

< amp chairs that the undertaker, Mr. McRoberts, had brought. A little timidly she came closer

to her mother.

It was hot and crowded in the little house. There was Bess and her husband, and the three children, the youngest asleep on the old feather bed that had been Lily Lou’s. John was there with his wife. Ena, and his two shy little boys that looked like twins, and weren’t. Earl was there, and his wife and t'.eir children. Rubv and Junior.

The I.ansings, as a family, were forever afterward to dale all events as before or after mother died. For years certain scenes were to he written on Lily Lou’s heart, to flash on and off in her memory, like isolated stills from a moving picture. She had never realized that her mother was beautiful. She had just been mother, a little tired, a little shabby, altogether beloved. Now she was to remember her, wrapped in the majesty of her isolation. Her hands serene on her breast, her dark, silver-streaked hair brushed back from her beautiful white forehead in an unfamiliar manner. Her lovely mouth, too often tightened into a worried line in life, younger and infinitely more gentle now. All the tired wrinkles gone. All the absorlied interest in her children gone. The soul, the motherly soul of her, fled away. Just the clay of her body, the body that for years nobody had noticed was beautiful, left. Certain other things impressed themselves almost as poignantly in Lily Lou’s memory. The round eyes of Bess’ three children, sitting in a row on the table that somebody had pushed in at the last moment, their fat legs straight out before them. The drone of the minister’s voice. The heavy fragrance of florists’ flowers, just a little past their prime. The little procession of cars, one limousine, half a dozen flivvers, winding down the unpaved road, past willow trees and the dry creekbed. to the cemetery. Two workers who waited, blueshirted, shovels at their feet, in the shade of a magnolia tree near the Lansings’ family plot, for the last wofdfl t< he owr so they could nile

“Your mother was a good woman. She hadn't ought to have married me,” he said. “It would have been better if she’d took Sam Hervey, like she set out to do.” Sam Hervey! The town’s boss— if a town the size of Woodlake can be said to have a boss—Sam Hervey, making the graduation speeches at the school, being toast, master at church suppers . . . and mother . . . long ago, when she was young, thinking of marrying him. Lily Lou squeezed dad’s hand tighter. And somehow that memory of dad, calling her Dolly, stayed with her, to comfort her, long after the other memories were faded and sweetened with time. It had been dad that she had been most afraid of. . . . His talk about a shotgun, how he’d just as lief take a shot at this one or that one who had done some dastardly thing. . . . For months she had dreamed of dad finding out how the Sargents had treated her, and going out to shoot somebody. And now he was the only one who asked no questions. Just held her hand, said, “I always thought you were more my side of the family, Dolly—” They—Raymond. May and she— stayed at Bess’ that night. Dad guessed he’d go on up to Uncle Eph’s cabin for a spell. Some things he had to take care of. After that, he might take up a fellows proposition, and go away. “What proposition — what fellow?” May asked sharply. “Oh, just a proposition a fellow made me.” “Umph!” said May. So dad limped out to the bad yard, where Uncle Eph’s mare was tied to the picket fence. Lily Lot wanted to run after him. . . . Mother gone. Uncle Eph, evet old Shep dead, and now dad on hil way up to Lone Mountain. . , ,

JTo Be C-affacef)

bainbridue Miss Hi leu Shuey returned to Chicago Sunday, accompanied by her sister, Mrs. Raymond Priest and daughter Anna Louise, who wall remain for

a visit.

Mrs. Barry Clark and children visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Gallbreath in Danville last week. Mrs. Ed 'Brothers and children and]

Mis- Mary Damall spent last Friday day with

with Mrs. Hattie Sigler at Clinton

Falls.

Mr. H. O Brattain and daughters were in Indianapolis Saturday. Mrs. Harvey Hall visited relatives in Russellville Sunday. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Allen

J

@oms to (Sfucogcr

Visit Americas most ipteresting dtyr feel the throD or giant business! Thnll to the rrwjor attroetfortf d ftage and screen. See Chicago's N^ht Life-hear the Ml,ant music and meet the leading theatrical stars m the College Ina

(700 ROOMS 1700 BATHS

FROM 43.

HOME OF THE COLLEGE i CHICAGO’S BRIGHTEST

LLEGE INN EST SPOT#

ou * are cotU invited to tonight and .,1

Joan

(

BEN NEli WbEKEnJ ONLY

Bbn LYON

Ruth Etting will 'inKfon, Eubie Blake's colored Hoi furnish the dance musn best entertainment irm J

a i

CiRA^Alfl -I

Mr. and

ut Greencastle.

Miss Lucille Cowger

Mrs. Wiley PaVis ployed at the Citizens hank is spend-

ing her vacation with her sister Mrs. who Cordon Daniels an 1 family at

troit. Mich. (The county Sunday s«hr I tion will bo hell at HrJ| church Sunday, August 14 { temoon. Dr. Albertson. retary of the state, will p dress.

for the week are their daughter, Mrs. C. O. Sprowl and son of Lansing,

Mich.

Mrs. Etta Fry of Greencastle visited her son Ralph an i wife over the weekend. Mrs. Estel Minnick, Mrs. Guy Cox, Mi>. Zeva I'ritchard, Mrs. Joe McKee and Mrs. Kn m i Hall spent last Tues-

>«> l M i: OF I MF *%I.F OF llO.M>* OF Tin: row \ or < 1.0% i:hi> 1 i.k, , I'l 1 \ \ >1 1 01 vrv, 1 mm % I

»TI< ’i: 1 ■ . uixun that on thn |

August. 1932.

ir.th

day o

lot k I*. M

». *^-j-, tn four

• f saul day the Board of

Town of Cloverdale,

nty, Incf

H T

ndlanu, to-wit:

lories

Trustees Put nam

<!• oi^e Kno K T Davis, and Chu .Mt Ovey. wi l oftTr for sale at the i’irst Natio'i Bank of Cloverdaie, Clowrdnle, l tii.im County, Indiana. . 1 isMit- 1 Nin* Thousand Dollars Ids Of the Town ol T' ’'dale. I 'liana, said Bonds will be Kighteen ID in number, and dated Ifu 15th da X’lffust, 1932, in denumiria'ions oi Five Hundred Dollars <$ -'>0.00) ea< I bearing interest at the ' foi id ono-half per cent per i per a nnum 11 otn dut • thereof until they become due and Im \ ab!e. saM interest payable semiannually on 1 ' 1st day of January'and the 1st day July of each year there-

each yei

after, eomn • itig with July 1. 19;;;;.

surrender of

ter. eviii

denced bv and upon

1 he annexed interest coupons as

severally be. ..me due. Sa

rally

be and be.

f500 Ja

15oo July

niia r ly 1.

<1 Ue 1. 1

and pay*a

954.

bon hie

*!’ O thej

ids to

$1,000 Jai-

ary 1. 1

11.000 July 1, 1955.

1. 1955.

$id"ta January 1. II.OOO July I. 195 $ l.ooo Januai v I.

1956.

uia i\ 1. 1957.

I. 1957.

f 1.000

$1,000 July 1

$ 1.000 Januarv I. IS $1,000 July 1, 1958. Said interest shall

coupons r ached to said boi

iild bn it'*' shall he

be evidenced

nds

*e signed on behalf

of said wn of Cloverdale, Indiana,

by

and

behalf

l>y the I ;• d of Trustees of said To

and at t • -'ed by the Clerk of

Tow:

wn. t.hid

iwn ami sealed with the seal of saild

Sai«i i 1 • rest coupons attached said bond shall be signed by the fac-

- dgne

iture of the President of

(h- Bn,1111 of Trustees of said Town of <’loverd Indiana, and attested by Bo* fa-> le signature of the Clerk of said T wn; said bonds shall be is-

sued iu laws of suant to

f he Town passed ;ii record nr

Trust • - - of April, ordinum • bonds to

purpose o to pay fo

erect ion works p|

■ rl.l

oinplhi

it

• I ado

ipliance with the

State of Indiana, and purcSolution and ordinance of

Moverdele. Indiana, dul

cd and entered by the Board

>pt» led

l.v of

Biffin

said Town on the 1st da\ '132, which resolution and

pro' stoe

uthorized and directed said issued and sold for the jviding funds to be used • k subscribed for in the d completion of a watert and system in the Town ile, Indiana Said Bonds

shall he s .ld according to law to the highest and best bidder for not less than par 01 face value and accrued in-

t' lesf then on. Bids will be

by mail m in pen of said 1 - li-is and rejert , 1uy or al Charles McOva'v,

K T. Davis. George Knoy.

Members of the Board of the town of Cloverdale,

Attest \{ M. Hunter, Town Clerk.

28-2t

received

will

bv mail " in person for the purchase

riff' M

or all bids.

the right is reserved

>ourd of Trustees

rdale. Indiana er, Town Cler

M»rn »: 10 iiMim.i: < ovih\< toi«*

Not i< het eb> ffiven that sealed

(proposes tor the 1 onstructlou of cerMin bridges on State Highways will j he re- iv- ii by the Director of the !n- . diana Stut. Highway Commission at Ibis off it « th*’ State House Ann* x in

, Indianapolis, until lO;00 A. \

“an

and re, describi

Pl’TNAM COI’NTY—Two bridges on Hoard 4J ('insisting of one bridg*-* over

Big Ka* < oon Cr ek

lapUllS, L..... ... .

Standard Time, August 23. 1932. whet

, it 1! propc ■ - • .

•end

tis will be publicly

T* |ggg| - • |

TNAM *COI'NTY

iese

'olio V

Central

len •iid icr

opei

rhese bridges are furth<

—Two bridge; if one bridge

approximately 0.3

I Mt ,f WHHHL .. J min - south of Kaccoou, conslstin

j t wo spai 11! 96 feet I approximately 0.2 mib-

ins

iff •

feet each including

approach grad.500 Cti. Yds.);

approximate)} 12.000 Cu. Yds.); nml onv bridge over the Baltimore and Dhio R R. at Rac oon consisting | five k* an - 12 feet. 32 feet. 39 f.-ot

• Milo R

3 2 feet.

1 33

u approach gra 20,000 Cu. Yds >

fee

feet, and 32 feet. iuclu<liu

mg

id

inch, ami

approxin .11efy 0 24 mile

Ing < .t pi • ximatel

1 The plan-i and spcificat* 011s mav be lextiiinicd it the office of the State jHigha.ik Commission. State House An- . nex. Indi.inapolis. or copies thereof will b. foi warded upon payment t»» the Dm < tor ui a nominal charge No r*(I ami will h. mad* 1 f*»r plans returned l I’r'ipMs.i bs must l»e made upon standard firms of Hie Indiana State 1 Hlghuay ('ommission. which will be

supplied u* on request.

, Kach bidder. With his proposal, shall fib a corporate surety bond payable ]<'» the Slat** of Indiana in the penal ( sum of at least one and one half i<l 1-2* times the amount of his proj poaal. with good and sufficient se-

>vul of the Diret

s'/'/’H 'b 'v ‘ l ^(* ox a ^ Hir«*t tor.

THK Form prescribed by law AND SHALL BE EX EC CITED UN THE

jcOKM HIM .>!> I:\ 1 ri 1^

Eor this bridge letting each bidde

shall file his “Exp

__.iperi«nce Record and

Financial Statement ' prior to filing 1 his proposals. Forms will be furnished

upon

! Son

request.

lorne of these structures will awarded in groups of two or more j strm tiir* s Further information regarding the work contemplated, the j method of letting and price of plans. ! will be furnished upon request,

| The right is reserved by the Director

to reject any or all bids or to award on unv stated combination of bids that is in ills Judgment most advantageous I

i in ms judgment mos j the State of Indiana. INDIANA STATE Hi

I MISSION.

GHWAY COM-

J J BROWN, DIRECTOR

A SOLID TRAINLOAD

hvtn Qalil,

ORANGES

HEAD LETTFC E PEACHES CELERY BARTLETT PEARS

BANANAS. .... SUGAR

SWEET, JUICY ( \I IE<HIM \ SL'NKIST < risp Solid llradH

Fancy

Klbcrtas Fancj Michigan Medium Size

Fancy

Duality

Do*.

15e

for

4 25c

Stalks 15c

2 Eh

Golden Ripe Fruit, — Lh.

PI RE CANE Buy Vow for ( inning

25 LB. (LOTH

BAG

R-i-A:

y

ICED TEA M esen Special

19c

M\\\\i;i.|. IKK SK

1-2 Lb.

Fk K .

CREAMERY BUTTER Country Club 20C i.h.

$1.1

-SALMON 3 23c

. I

3.F, Country Club ( offee—Lh

29

JEW EL

COFFEE Lb. 17c 3 Rag. 49C

SODA

CRACKERS 2 ' box 17c

FLOUR

Crisp Fresh

Lh.

Box

Avondale • • Hi^h Quality

KIDNFA

BEANS ( min try (luh

5c

/'

( on

Lh.

* SPECIAL

2 ( ana

Campbell’s Beans And a large II Oz. Bottle

( ountry Club < ATSl P—For

19c

WALDORF

Tissue 6 Koiu 25c

24

0LE0

PaK

Eat more 25c

Lb-t.

WH KATIES

MACAROON SNAPS

ASSORTE0CO1 O VNl T KIN(iS l)el, " 0 ‘ 1 ' . ( andv —

Fh:«t Delicious Breakfast ( ere; I

fresh

H iked Lh.

9 * Pk^

AFTER-DINNER MINTS

IJFEiU I<)> SOAP

RINSO

FRUIT JARS

MILK

Lh.

andy

Always Good — Lh I he Health Heap Make? Laundrying Easier l arge Pkfj. 22r; " ith Gaps r'tm.'nT - 79 ' : D ° Mn

4

L) m

1; 1;

3p„ -mall J'l

(i’kgs.

SUGAR CURED BACON Light Avg. lOt,, 3 To 5 U». Piece, Lb. 1 i; C

PORK LOIN ROAST

3 To 5 Lh. Cuts. Lb.

PORK STEAKS Lean 1 9 1 Tender—Lh. . L2i21

Club

MINCED

LUNCHEON

12k

Sliced

I h

SMOKED HAMS

dlgrr Cured, Skinned 12 lo It Lh. Avg. W hole or Half

13!c

PK HEARTS SPARE RIBS PK LIVER PK. BRAINS

3 IJvs. 25c

VEAL CHUCK Roast Tender 12k

Car*

SLICED BA( ON No R nd or " 1 s ** 15c Lh

CHUCK

ROAST

Tender. Juicy

15c Lb

ROUND OR SIKI "' N STEAKS

29c th

NORDK 'I ' 1 1 FISH ^

Nr, Bon.

Or Waste, Lh.

J Dm foil 1 Cg 1 the 1 hia 1 pel and

o

o