The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 July 1933 — Page 2
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THE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE. INDIANA. hRIDAY. ILLY 1933.
soviet Envoy:
-ti uck by a tnirrt machine driven by Raymond E. Willis, Angola newspaperman, were brought to Cameron hospital here. The woman’s condition
was said to be serious.
Four occupants of the newspaj>erman's machine escaped injury. The accident occurred when Willis’ car struck the l>eeter machine at the top cf a hill and knocked it into the
THE DAILY BANNER
And
Herald Consolidated “It Waves For AH” Entered in the postoffice at Green-
The small daughter of Mr. and MrsFrank Elrod of near Coatesville who has been ill for several days was reported in a serious condition, Fri-
day afteni.son.
J J. Eitel. chairman of the Associ-
'PUTNAM COl M Y CHICHJSTERSXIUS ! WILL SEND Kii '
path of Tume. - auto. The car niven nam County; $3 50 to $5.00 per year by Turney turned turtle, crushing out ^ by ma d outside Putnam County
the lives of both occupants.
FI.-H QUIT SICKER FAMILY
In event of r- ^nition of Soviet Ruf-:a by tl Skvirsky (above) may be the first official envoy from Moscow since the severanie of diplomatic relations. Skvirsky is chief of the Soviet Government bureau in the capital
Two Men Killed In 3-Car Crash
1 WO OTHER PERSONS INJURED IN ACCIDENT NEAR ANGOLA LAST NIGHT ANGOLA. Ind, July 2e (UP)—A three-*ay automobile crash six mi^ =iouth of here last night claimed the lives of two men and injured two other persons, one seriously. Ora Turney, 30, Dunkirk. Ind., driver of one ma hire, and anotner man dentifie i as Lee Hare, 35, also of Dunkirk, riding with Turney, were idlled outright. Mrs. Eva Coral Deeter. Greenville. O.. nd net husband whose car was
WASHINGTON, (UPi — Certain members of the Sucker family of fishc-- ate net “suckers." according I *o E. D. Reid. Smithsonian Institution biologist. This rare member of the sucker family, which Reid found recently at the headwaters of the James river in VirgT.is, has rid itself of its air blad- | der, so tha* it cai. rtay on the b. ttom j and not be washed away by the rapid s.rea n it lives in. Keid explained that the air bladder • rabies the fish to float without effort. Otherwise, he says, its body l .-.s the same specific gravity as that I f a man, and it must either sink or
* .-vdm.
“The fish without any air bladder," Reid points ut. “is almost the equivalent of a bird without wings.” T.-.e Smithsonian terms this as “rei markable example of the way evolution fits life forms for almost every
j sort of environment.”
Peautifully colored strange fishes —especially minnows—also are found in the mountain streams of southwest
Virgin.a, the Smithsonian expert -ays.' golf at the Highland course.
Ordinarily, these fish are dull colored .■nd irconspicious. But here, they exj plain, the fishes “take on all the coloi s of the rainbow in beautiful eom‘.inationo rivaling the mest highly
.lured f tropical fishes.”
castle, Indiana, as second class mail i te() Ketailer8 of p uUliim County, will matter under Act of March 8, 18<8. attend a National Recovery Act nieetSubscription price, 10 cents per jn th(? American Legion hall at week; $3 00 per year by mail in P ut -1 Crawf>)rd8vUle thls evening at 7:30
o’clock. A blanket code for Montgomery county is expected to be worked out at the meeting which will be addressed by a speaker from ChicagoMr. Eitel expects to bring back information for a meeting to be held here next week. Anyone interested in the National Recovery Act has been invited by Russell H Tompkins, secretary of the Chan ter of Commerce | at Crawfordsville. to attend the meeting tonight, according to Mr Eitel.
TO Ml CAMP
fjgplf A ^CCVES NINp | iteWu-’I'WBBBB :: A,,d " '* *»■ wn .1
1
HAS SECOND LARGEST ENROLLMENT OF ANY COL.NTY IN DISTRICT
And so
money
small loan sure and
it goes
proposition. Alio j{* | j
you A
will
help
PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS
CAMP TO BE HELD AUGUST 2-6
Mayor W. L. Denman was in Indi-
anapolis Friday.
Mis. S. C. Sayers underwent an emergency appendix operation at the county hospital Thursday evening. Miss Mary Humphrey of Bainbridge underwent an operation at the county hospital Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Morris, 819 south Indiana street, are the parents of a daughter, born Friday morning. Wesley Flint, of Flint’s Market, is spending his vacation seeing the Lentury of Progress Exposition in Chi-
cago.
Mr.- Wallace Long, north College avenue, entered the Methodist hospital in Indianapolis Friday morning for
observation and treatment.
R. P. Mullins, Glenn Lyon, C. B Edmonson and -Marshall Abrams were in Indianapolis today and played
Mrs. Mae Terry and daughter
Freeda have moved to Greencastle from Indianapolis They are residing
at 400 north College avenue.
>Kl \K. C OP’S PET ST. JOSEPH, Mo., (UP) — popular pet of the St. Joseph force ie a skunk named Pedro.
fjtt rtnutiutG NO-TYP£ /
Aladdin
Mantle Lamp
White Liqht
^ e n e
/ EXACTLY AS l illustrated
.)
Cobh when your purchases at this store amount to but 510.
fJuftw/fwRy/ Ask Us At Once
Derails
ES12321l3nniEIII3aC3II
Browning - Hammond Hdw. Co. E«»l Side Square Telephone 214
Miss Mary Florence Albin has returned home from Chicago where -he attended A Century of Progress ExMost position She also visited friends in
police Pari> | U>
___ Mrs. Lewi- Hodshire, Crown street, who underwent an emergency operation at the county hospital Thursday evening, was reported in a serious
condition Friday.
Miss Fiances Robertson and Miss Lorraine Davis returned home Friday from Franklin where tr.e\ spent the part ten days attending the Franklin V ung People's Assembly. The Putnam county American Legion Pest No. 58 will meet in regular session Tuesday evening, Aug. 1, at 8 o’clock. All ex-service men welcome. Urgent business. There will be no services at Brick Chapel Sunday but they will be re--ume i the following Sunday morning. The church -whool will continue withiit interruption at 10 o’clock. I>>roy Baker, -enter.ced in Putnam county July 25, 1931, to serve three to ten >ears for burglary, had his petition for a parole denied by the state clemency commission Thursday. Funeral services for Mrs. Eva Elliott who died Wednesday evening at her home southeast of I<a l >ga were held Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock fr >m the Elliott home. Interment was in the Roachdale cemetery. City firemen were called to the AirIort Filling station on Bloomington -treet road, about 5:15 o'clock Thuisday aftenoon, when wiring on a Model T Ford coupe caught file. The car belcngi t t“ Giant Todd of Grove-
land-
City firemen made a run to 317 Central avenue about 8 o’clock Fridav miming when a fire bloke out
LUMBER SHIPPING BOOMS SEATTLE, (UPi — Shipping lines have announced the "ere “filled up” with lumber orders .md space aboard their boats has bee:, signed for some time in advance, due to the upturn in the lumber market Lumber tariffs .•re up from $9.75 to $10 23. Highei rates, because of increased booking- aie expected. The Arrow Line ;- booked to the first of July and i- ] tting on an extra -hip, tile Helen Whittier, which has been tied up n San Francisco since 1931. The Williams Steamship corporation, a subsidiarj f the American Hawaiian Steamship company, was prepared to take the idle freighter, Willpolo, out of Lake Union and put her back into ser. e She wdll load at Seattle, Toconia Bellingham and on the Columbia river for Puerto Rico, Chaileston, N rf< Ik, Baltimore, and Albany, N. Y She will carry about 3,000,000 fe<-: •' lumber. The Quaker Line and t e Hawaiian Steamship compr: r- also reported capacity lumber orde:-
Ql ELK GADGET' K) BE SHOWN fit INVENTORS CLEVELAND, (IPi—Strange contraptions of every description, from a contrivance tha: will clean out a beer coil “in less time than it takes 11 tell,” to new- typr- f locomotives, will be on display at the National Inventors Congress here Sept. 5 to 9. Arthur Shenderiein, of Oakland, Ca., will exhibit a motor which he claims will carry pa-sengers to Mars, >r any other plai t in record timeHe declared his motor will go 100,000 miles without gasoline. Included among the devices which wil be displayed are < in-controlled machines to dispense everything from cool drinks to gasoline; a patented tire lock that defies removal of tire and rim; a washing machine for apartment hou-i-s which folds away into an inconspicious comer, and a thread-twisting machine for making raw silk into thread. POLK F. DOG RIDE' TAXIS
Camp Officers Are Announced For Annual Event To Be Held At
Shakamak State Park
Itrid- 1 -Elect To Be Honored With Shower
Mi.-s Imogene Mullins, 5345 East Washington street Indianapolis, 1 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. P- Mul-
The housing capacities of the 4-H i; ns 0 f this city will entertain with a
Club camp at Shakamak state park will be taxed about sixty individuals over its present arrangement when 4-H club members from five countie convene there from Wednesday afternoon until Sunday morning of next
week-
A total of 300 boys and girls have registered from the five counties of this vicinity and Clay county has 87 of these, the largest enrollment from any county. Putnam is second with 83; Vermillion, 52; Sullivan. 43; and Parke, 35 In order to accomodate the overflow extra sleeping quarters are being afforded The regular capacity
is estimated at 240.
Clay county 4-H club agent R. D McHargue will be. director of the
kitchen shower and bridge party Friday evening for Miss Madonna Dell Hur t, south east of Greencastle, who will be married August 19 to Edw-ard J. Hecter Jr. of Indianapolis.
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Phillips Reunion to Re Held August 6 The 32nd annual Phillips reunion will be held Sunda\ August 6, at Colewater paik, east of Stilesville. ■i* 'h *»* + •r +
Pair,bJ fnet^T
Engagement of Freeda
Terry Announced
Mrs. Mae Terry, 400 north College avenue, has announced the engagement of her daughter, Freeda. to Gene W. Earley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
camp. A schedule of 4-H Club camp j 3herman Earley. The wedding will
take place in August.
vesper
Derrick.
ATLANTA. Ga , (UP)—There's a fi\e year old German police dog here that s the envy of the town, for he rates a ride in a taxi anytime he takes a notion and all he does is bark at a passing at, for bang up service. His name is \ ,n Graf, and his mastei i- A1 Belle I-ie, owner of the city’s taxi system. V.,n Graf hangs his hat of nights at the Ivy street garage of the taxi company, but he’s a roving type, almost always on the go If he’s downt wn, and wants to go home, he goes to the head car in line
'-.av morning when a fire Dioke out i lllJ waits paunder the stairway in a home occupied 1 1 * ur 1 1 t0 °l ,,rn > a, ‘d hops
(onto the hack .-eat where he sits in dignified style to be driven to the
activities which will be hel 1 a* Shakamak and also a list of the camp of-
ficers follows: Daily .'schedule
6 a. m—Reveille. 6:50—Flag raising and calisthenics
7:00—Breakfast. 8:15-8:45—Class-8:50-9:20—Class.
9:25-9:55-Class. 10:15-11:15—Swim.
12:00—Dinner.
1:00 p. m-2:10—Rest period. 2:20-3:20—Organized play-3:45-415—Swim-
5:30—Supper.
6:45-7:20—Flag lowering;
service.
7:20-7:45—Rest period. 7:50-8:00—Group singing. 8 00-9:00—Camp Fire 9:30 p- m.—Lights out.
Camp Officers
Camp Manager—M. K-
Sullivan county.
Camp Director—R D. McHargue,
Clay county-
Secretary-Treas.—H L. Ruyce, Clay-
county.
Commissary Dept- Miss Lorene Hick®, Putnam county, chairman. Miss Viola McCammon, Sullifai;
county.
Charles Heller, Parke county. Quarters and Sanitation— E. W 1 Faker, Putnam county, chairman Mrs. Florence Miller, Vermillion
county.
Mrs- Della Tent.is, Clay County. Swimming — J C. McHargue, Parke county Vesper service and Camp Fire— Eugene Akers. Putnam county. Publicity—Miss Elizabeth Padgett, Putnam county. Camp Nurse— Miss Shipman. Vermillion countyCamp instructors — Mr. Adam Bowles, Clay county; Miss Shipman, Vermillion county, One instructor to be selected at a later dateRecreation—Sumner Brcwn, Vermillion county, chairman; Miss Rochel Randolph, Parke county: Mr Charles Edmonson, Putnam county; Mis? Lucille McClain. Putnam county.
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vlrs. Rutter Hostess
: To Ladies Aid
The Brick Chapel Ladies Aid met jv.ith Mrs, Charles Rutter Thursday Pwenty-six members and fourteen guests were present. Devotions were led by Mrs. Bales. A short business was conducted by the president. Mrs. Walter Reeves, j The following program was given: instrumental solo by Keva O’Hair: leading, “Whew,” Mrs. Leota O'Hair; instrumental solo, Mary Jane Reising;; reading, “Making Reulien Proi pose,” Mildred O’Hair; song, Rowena i and Marjorie South; poem, Ruby
see us.
ii THE AMERICAN SEdJRlU (| l Loans and Financing hist PU.J -•rin; riddles, Blanche O’Hair A social hour f llowed, meats were served.
4- + + + + 4
Miss Garrett Entertains Friends at Bainhridge Miss Doris Garrett of entertained a number of
her home in the Bain!,ri,i ?f Wadnead r in honor of Miss Anne Dunw ojjl Lafayette, a cousin of Miss GaJ Games and contests, -eleven J planned by Miss Wilma GibsmJ forded the entertainment for -.htJ ning. Refreshments were sen-jil
the hostess.
Those present were Miss AnncDl woody of Lafayette; M -- Cirl McKamey and John Y< ng 0 f R.J dale; Misses Helen June and fj Gibson, Miss Lueile Nich Is. FJ Michael and Stanley O'Hair fi] bridge; Donald Wilson of RjJ and Miss Doris Garrett
+ + 4* >!• + + 4 H Club Met
At Schoolhouse The "Happy Workers” 4-H J Madison township met at ',1 schoolhouse. After a lion ‘, a J meeting the club went swimmufj had a picnic supper. In the J a program was given. WiiJ Grimes gave two readings r-j Marshall, a visitor, w.is pie,;erirj next meeting will be held at (J schoolhouse with swim. . -.1 picnic afterward.
JS
BANNER APS f FT RE'QT! I ^ _ I
COAL-COAL We have for delivery the last of the week: () inch Sullivan County lower lump a Raven Red Ash coal. At Prerecovery Prices. A. J. DUFF Phone 111
by Charles Trail and Frank Pierce
Firemen were unable to leant the source of the blaze. Only a minor
amount of damage was done.
Campus Market
Phones 82-83
Flour
f
.00
Cold Medal
Pillsbury
American Beauty *
24 Lb. General Purpose Flour 61c
One Day Only
10 Lb. E. Z. Bake Flour 45c
Puffed Wheat—Pkg lie Ci ape Nut Flakes—2 for 19c Corn Flakes or Post loasties, 2 for .. 15c Soap—Kirks or P.&G.—10 Bars 31c
Palmolive Soap — 3 for Super Suds — 2 For
16c 15c
lomato Juice— Beechnut—3 Cans Peanut Butter, Beechnut, Large Can
Green Beans — 3 Cans 25c Khole Kernel Corn—2 for 25c
25c 15c
Ginger Snaps — 2 Lbs. For 19c
CANNING SUPPLIES
FRUIT JARS—
1 Quarts 73c ( Pints 63c
Can Lids—2 Dozen for 45c Can Rubbers — 2 Dozen for 9c Parowax — Per Pkg. 10c Fancy Dressed Frys — Lb. 25c
Fancy Sliced Bacon — 2 Lbs. for .. 35c Pork Loin Roast — Lb. 12 l-2c Canadian Style Bacon Lb. 30c Cured Ham — Center Slices — Lb. 25c Steaks — Very Best — Lb 25c Choice Cuts for Roast Lb. 18c and 15c
A COMPLETE LINE OF LUNCHEON MEATS OF THE VERY BEST QUALITY AT REASONABLE PRICES.
We want to help you save money but not by buying cheap merchandise.
garage.
V r n Graf, incidentally, pay* no attention to any other type vt ear but th se driven by his master’s
pany.
com-
WATCH. TAKEN IN JAMES’ HOLDUP, GETS NEW CASE JERSEYVILLE, III, (UP)_A 53y*ar old watch, which once derived notoriety when it figured in a train rcben neai Glendale, Mo., headed by Jesse James, has been placed in a new case. fi e timepiece is owned by William Hallaid of Jerseyville He purchased it in i860 and two years later it was taken from him during a train rcb6«ry at Glendale, Mo. At the time | ' f the robbery Ballard recognued I Jesse James, the leader of the bandit Igang, as a cousin of his father's. | Several day* after the robbery the j watch was returned to Ballard ; through the malls. Ballard’s name I had been engraved in the watch and j made it possible for James to I it once it was discovered it to a relative.
■ return belonged
ECONOMY STORE
Hunt Hit and Run Bike Rider BILLINGS, Mont,, (UP)—The bicycle fad added to the worry of police heie when a new chaige—that of a woiiun being struck down by a bicyclist hit an-run driver—was aruerel or. t • books.
ROTARY WINS 8LUGFEST (Continued From Fuse One) a pair. F.d lynch had a flooded caiburetor and could only make first base on a home run hit. Bernard Handy was in left field for iit*- K; b but knowing ,i fly j catching ability, the Rotary clubbers | knocked the flys to other sections. Joe Bamberger made a lot better second baseman than he did a center fielder, and had not the strategy of Catcher Schoenman in making the change worked, there might have been another story to write. John Etter was the most active “star” on the field. Doc Killinger ran him a close second until the late inning, when he succumbed to the diffeience in years. Paul Boston argued over everything, just like a school teacher would, and his early talk caused the umps numerous close decisions. Paul played n whale of a game at shortstop—at times. R .wland Leach, on second for the K’s covered the whole field and his only error was the. less of a shoe late in the game. He hit like he fielded and was hard to stop in every play. The knowledge of the game by all players was a marcel to Charley Edmonson and he will have additional facts to gi\e athlete- durirtfe tbs next school year. Gib Rhea was put cut of the game about mid-way by an emergency appendicitis opeiation. Gib was going big until he had to leave. from the press stand it fca* 7 7
FLOUR FOR LESS Gold Medal. Pillsbury, E. Z. Hake, 5 lb. bag 25c 10 Lb. Hag 45c H i'l till', the perfect Cereal, l>/ $1.39 Gloss Starch, S lbs 23c Laundi) Soap. White Naptha 12 ban for Ha Kraft's Salad Dressing. Qt, 25c Sandwich Spread, Qt. .... 25c Sw .ft's Brandt d Beef, always the same, always good. ( ubtd '•'eak is better. No hone. No Waste. Lb. . 20c Heef Roast, Lb. 13c. Boil .. 5c Fancy Club Steak, all Cut the same Lb 15c Our Meats arc Cut with the Precision of the most Modern Machinery. Sugar Cured lender loin. Lb. 25c Smoked Ham, Center cut, lb 25c PHONE 740
Granulated 'ug.ir 10 0's * Gold Mi dal 'oft as 'ilk UU Flour, .'ati'lii- I - : '.in hist LemonI) zen Fancy Yellow Freestone Peaches. Ll>. Califcrnia Pea- (. • n fl i* I Red-Ripe Tomatoes. l'ucural*it| Home Grown Fresh BeoaJ Lbs Swift's Breakfast Roll Bk* Lb m Plenty Lunch Meats. Fre«h I-ean Pork Chops 'll M cut the same, 2 lbs Pork steak. Lb. 13c I Fee'll Meaty Spare fills. I* 1 '■ Fresh Tenderloin I rcnched I Uh Sugar Cured Bacon in !> I Lb Sliced Bacon, 'pei 'al 2 9* Small Sugar Cure I Picnics
Flint’s Market
Phone 355
316 N. Jackson
HOME KILLED MEAT—THE VERY BEST P < ‘f Lb. 25c Frezh Ground Beef. Lb Beef Roait, Lb. 12't c - 15c Pork Chop., small lb. 12''«
Fresh Fish, Per Lb.
| Goon GROOMS, YYhile they last, Ea. 25c
Bulk Coffee — 2 Lb*. 28 0z. Can Red Kidney Beam. Each
Clean Quick Laundry Soap 10 Bar. 25c
WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF GARDEN SEEDS.
Everything in Fre.h Fruit, and Vegetable. . FREE DELIVERY
