The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 August 1933 — Page 2

foething At

59!

| Joe Hurst has returned from Chi- ! ragD where he attended the Century

i of ProKress Exposition-

THE DAILY BANNER

And

Herald Consolidated vfrs J J, Anderson of Akron. Ohio “It Waves For All” : is spending a few days with her,

Entered in the postoffice at Green- | mother Mrs. Martha Ison. Hennis Hurst W eds castle, Indiana, as second class' mail ^ ^ ^ {)hio Girl. Monday

The wedding of Miss Dorothy Mendenhall, (daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Mendenhall of Marietta, O.. and Dennis Hurst, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theod' re Hurst, southeast of town, took place Monday afternoon at the First Presbyterian church parsonage at Covington. The ceremony was

read by the Rev. Scholl.

The bride is a teacher in the Marietta schools. The young couple will

A protracted meeting begins at make their home at Maiietta where

Long Branch Monday, September 4. Br, George Klingman of Kentucky,

will preach for two weeks.

Miss Edna Hamilton and Mrs. Eula Hartley who have been visiting their mother, Mrs. Betty Hamilton, are now atttn. uig the World’s Fair in

Chicago.

were accompanied by Russellville.

friends from

matter under Act of March 8, 1878^ Juanita and Clara Belle visited Subscription pnee, 10 cents per Fair TueS(i

week; }3 00 per year by mail in Put-

nam County; J3 50 to ?5.00 per year Miss Elizabeth Connelly of Putby mail outside Putnam County- | na niville was reported quite ill at

tlie county hospital Wednesday after-

noon.

Rev and Mrs. Robert T Reck have returned home front Chicago where they attended sunwiier school at the

University of Chicait".

PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS

KM THU I. BETTER FINALLY COLLECTS ELECTION WAGER

SAVES NINE

And so it

goes

The M lose lodge will meet this evening at 8 o'clock in regular session. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Gillen are in Chicago this week attending the

woild’s fair.

With an ii fant’s teething ring. Mr- J W Stilwell of Council Bluffs, ( v a, ,/.e s the giowth if a third set ,>f teeth in her lower jaw and her 1 upi'i jaw i sire, indicating that teeth are attempting to l reak through the •.•urn there She has worn false teeth for twenty-seven years w she won't .eid any longer, she will preserve them because of sentimental attachment.

’ l l ' MSHIP USE SETS NEW HIGH FUR PROPER G VRB AN FRANCISCO. (UP)—Clothes may, i may not, make the man, but t 1 of the Matson Navigation 1 .'ipany and Oceanic Steamship i ..ipany are- convinced pioper garb I n uch to do with efficiency of its t towards. f stewards have become seaudcnii plates under new comay .dei . Here is a sample of -.iitoi :1 “regulations”; morning, uK I usiness suit; lunche-n. striped • t .-(, m rning (cutaway) coat and st, plus wing c liar and black tie: c ' c tuxedo or full dress. i he travel line e\> n makes a busiout of romance—in tropical or i i'ii-tropical waters the chief stewids don dazzling white flannel suit* t ? day and appear in regulation navy

mess-jackets and dress trousers by light of the moon. Head waiters and their assistants are equalh as sartorially perfect. DEFBt TIVK 3.2 BEER KEG ( U -K OF DAM \GK SUIT OAKLAND, Cal, (UP I—Explosion rf a keg containing 3.2 Ix-er causes! damage estimated by Chris Mineff. Oakland cafe proprietor, at 13(1,227. ■" orriing to Mineff- .-uit against the Golden West Brewing Company. Mineff charged the biewing coninanv with negligence in placing the beverage “in a defective keg.” He was injured in the explosion. His hospital bill was slii'2, ar,l the cost of repairing damages to the building .'.117. but he asked $30,227 in his suit. BANNER ADS ( FT RESULTS

Miss EVelyn Shuck has returned to her home here after visiting friends

in Fillmore.

, , , Earl Moore, who escaped from the

Mrs. W. W Tuckei is at home from

„ Indiana State Farm May 30, ItMO,

New York where s ie accompanied , , . • ,, , I U . whlle serving a term imposed in \i ,,,, ,\lcs Glen 1 fu kei ten days .

.in ui - mumcipal court at Indianapolis, is iUr0, | held in jail awaiting arraignment be-

Mi - Vrthur M. Morgan and son [ fore Judge VN’ilbur S Dinner in cir\llan of R .ntoul. HI., are visiting ] cuR court for escaping

Mv-. Rantoul’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.

J. C. Brothers of this city.

Mr and Mrs. R. P. Mullins and laughter Betty, have returned home from Chicago where they attended the World’s Fair. Mr. and Mrs. George Wise and Mrs. Etta Johnson of Frankfort were Tuesday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shuck of Fillmore. A recital i- to lie given at the home •of Miss Barbara Pickett of Reels, ville. Thursday evening. August 31 by her class in voice and piano. Mr- J. F- Spurlock and son F'ay Spurlock, Miss Doris J.ong and Mild red Staten have returned home from hh ago where they spent three days at the World’s Fair. A Dodge roadster driven by Earl T: u. -dale of Fillmore and a Ford tudor driven by C. O. Smith of Elmira. crashed at the intersection of Jackson and W: Inut streets about 9:30 a m. Wednesday. Mr. Smith was enroute north on Jackson and Mr. Truesdale was headed west on Walnut when the collision occurred. Both cats were damaged but none of i •• o rupants of either machine was injured.

George Avery of i ■ lar Grove, N. J who was injured in an automobile accident Tuesday neir Stilesville, remains in a serious condition at the county hospital. Mi Avery suffered lacerations about the face which will result in the loss of the left eye and deep cuts about th' face and chin. Charles Davis, 24. who escaped from the penal farm Tuesday while serving a term impose i in Greencastle, was taken to the Indiana state reformatory Wedne-.liy by Sheriff Alva Bryan where he will serve one to five yeais ns a |ienalty for escaping. Davis was sentenced to the reformatory Tuesday afternoon by Special Judge ChaiT- McGaughey. Mrs. Blanche Robinson of East Chii ago, elected department president of the American Legion auxiliary at the state convention a' Evansville Tuesday, is the wife of Kn sell F. Robinson, a formed Green istle man- Robins: n is the sen of Mr. and Mrs. John ii ibinson, living east of Greencastle. The new department commander, a native of Laclede, Mo., is a charter member of the Twai City unit of the auxiliary and has served as unit president, district, president, on the ; tnte financial committee and various

other auxiliary position.

HARTFORD, Conn., (UP) — Jack Kelley is only 10 years old, but he knows hip polities. Last November he het a neighbor, Mr- David Whittlesey, Roosevelt onlii be elected president. If he won, Mrs. Whittlesey was to bake him a blueberry pie; if he lost, Mrs. Whittlesey could smear his face with it. J: , k waited eight months fur the biuebet ry season to collect his bet.

Sand IO ? STORES

with s*ccctId Merchandise todies

Prices Are Going Up! Now is the Time — And Here s the Place to Save 5-n

School Aoparel

AND ACCESSORIES FOR BOYS and GIRLS’ Everything for the ichool g.rl or boy! Durable School Apparel . . . Accessories of All Kinds . . . School Staimnery and the hundred and one other things needed when School Bells Ring. You 11 find them all at MURBHY'S . . . and as usual economi-

cally priced, too!

mU

Girls' New SCHOOL FROCKS

Boys* Basque Sweaters 39c

Sizes 7 to 14 years*

Si/.es Mt to 41

Lovely New Fall F'rocks for school wear; fashioned of fine quality Broadcloths and 80square percales and prints. They are guaranteed FAST COLORS . . . and you get a NEW dress if one fades. Full cut and perfectly tailored. The clever trimmings will please every mother and miss!

Girls' Wool SWEATERS $1.29

Guaranteed 100% Pure Wool Sweaters, so warm, wooly and stylish! Styles "alore; and color^ too! Sizes from 28 to 34. Every sweater a rare value

at this low price!

Ladu*,’ Full Fashioned Silk Hose 79 c Boys' High Grade Longies, pair $1.J9 Boys’ Athletic Gym Shirts 35c Boys’ Four-In-Hand Ties I0c Boys’ Quality Suspenders 25c Boys' Swesit Shirts 49c Boys’ Full Cut Gym Pants 35c

-1

KNICKERS 69c

Boys' well made, long wearing and good looking knickers lor which this store is noted. VALUFS, too, for every pair is worth considerably more today! Sizes 6 to 14. Boys Shirts QSr and Blouses ” Button-on blouses in sizes 4 to 9, and real mannish shirts in sizes 6 to 14. All are guaranteed absolutely fast color; full cut and perfectly tailored. Collar attached style. School Stationery Loose Leaf Binders, each 10c School Dictionaries 10c to 98c Large Pencil Tablets, each 5c Loose Leaf Filler Paper, pkg 5c Composition Books, each 5c White Typewr. Paper, pkg. 5c & 10c Yellow Typewr. Paper, pkg. 10c Stenographers’ Note Books 5c & 10c Lead Pencils 1c, 2 for 5c, & 3 for 5c High Quality Lead Pencils, each . 5c Pen Holders, Many Styles, each.... 5c Mechanical Pencils, each I0c Fountain Pens & Pencils, ea<3i 20c Leads for Automatic Pencils 18 5c Colored Crayons, box s c & 10c Paste and Glue, tube or jar 5c & 10c Writing Inks, well-known brands, 10c Rubber Brands, 2 packages for..., 5c Erasers, many styles, 2 for Sc

BAT INJURED WOMAN FAX PORTERVILLE, Cal., (UP)—Add watching baseball game to the m.ire hazardous occupations. Mrs. Charles Young of Popterville was injured painfully when the bat slipped from the hands of a player at a game she was watching und struck her across the throat. DI ER'S Dll I MKI.iiN RINDS PORTERVILLE, Cal (UP) - A deer with an a; petite for watermelons is a regular visitor at cabins in the summer colony at Camp Nelson. The dei r, a large loe, “hangs around" the back doors of the cabins until she ; is given food preferably watermelon I i inds, W P Han om reported on a I trip to town.

FARMERS The Sugar Creek Creamery Wants 300 gal f Cream Saturday. It will pay you to come in

Ruptured? DEWARS I ThaMaatfa •* ara Mag v!«*laitiMI aaafe graar ky falM •f “•ora-Cara”

f\UT8IDE of a aurgual operation, a iood truta, correctly fitted, it the

only safe relief for rupture.

Your individual eequirements may call for one of the various “Excelsior" NunSkid Spot Pad TiusMea—the new, perfected, liaht-weight types which require only one-naif the pressure of all other styles. A sanitary, rubber-<*>vered "Spot Pad" furnishes proper pressure exactly

where neededf

We have a Complete Lino

Our fitte

-All SUet.

Our fitter, experienced in all types of FKEJt* CoWAaV'S'/ ifoviSS! Don't Deity — Rteulte Guetentted. * COUE TO US AT OMCE. Wfc CAM

.HELP YOU I

MULLINS ASKj STORE

the bridegroom is employed.

•h H* •F

S, c. c. Club Members Enjoy Pol-Luck Supper

Miss Nellie Brown and Mrs. Gail AmoL.l entertained the S. C. C. club Tuesday evening at a pot-luck supper at the home if Miss Blown on state load 40 Twenty-five member- and two guests, Mrs. Anna Scale? and M> ?. Maggie Adams, were present.

( rn-Tat-Em Club To Meet Thursday

The Cro-Tat-Em club will meet Thursday evening at 7'30 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Laura Williams, 16

Beveridge street.

+ + + + ■!• +

Conference Club To Meet Wednesday The conference will meet at the Christian Church Wednesday evening at 7:30 o’clock. Pleace be pros- | ent as there will be an election of |

officers-

+ + + 4* + + Old School Reunion Held Sunday tug. 20 The pupils and teachers of the old Reelsville school met Sunday, Aug. 20.1 for their seventh annual reunion. A large crowd gathered at the church and spent the forenoon visiting. At no n a long table was spread with all the good things of the season i and every one invited to partake. At one-thirty the afternoon session, was called to order by B. P. Hutche- . son, chairman, Mrs. J. H- Strain had charge of devotional exercises. The music was conducted by Barbara Pickett. A history of the old school was read by Mrs. Geo. Fox- A short j memorial by Mr- Chas- Knight, for | those who had died since the la?t meeting, then a talk was given by Mr. Donald Reel of Montezuma This was followed by ji discussion after which the officers for next year were appointed Mis- Margaret Donald, chairman, Mrs. Ida Donald, vice chairman. Miss May Pickett, secretary and

treasurer.

“When the Roll is Called Up Yonder”, was sung by the congregation and the Benediction pronounc'd by Mrs Strain- The meeting then adjourned until the 3rd Sunday in Aug-

ust 1934.

++++** Baldwin ReUmon To He Hel I Sunday Sep(. 3 The Baldwin reunion will he held Sunday, September 3 at the home of Homer Baldwin eight mile- southeast of (Toverdale. Everybody welcome. ++++++ O’Conner Reunion To Be Held Sunday The annual O’Conner reunion will he held Sunday September 3, at the Cloverdale school house All relatives and friend- are invited to attend

el* *!«

Honored W ith liiilhday Dinner A number of friends and relatives gathered at tho home of Robert Shuck of near Fillmore Sunday to celebrate his birthday anniversary. A bountiful dinner was served at the noon hour. A short program in the afternoon included violin numbers by Sammy Nichols and Mr. F'ulfnrd; guitar selections by Marcelles Hubble and *ongs by Bobby Robinson. Thing, present were Mr. and Mrs. Curt Riley of Lebanon; Sammy Nichds of near South Bend; Dr. Eaihart, E. Waters, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Nichols and children, Miss Mary Nichols, Mrs. Rebecca Shuck, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bryant, all of Indianapolis; Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Shuck and family, Mr. and Mrs. William Gulford. Mr. and Mrs. Heist, Mrs. Not a Hunter and si n Billy, Mis* Louise Williams f Greencastle; Mr. and Mrs. l^wis Hubble and children of CoateRville; Miss Elma Robin son, Mrs. Lizzie Hunter and son James, Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Shu^k and sons, Mr and Mrs. Cecil Huller, Mr. aivi Mrs. William Smith, Evelyn Jane Miller, Royal Rustam, Joe Watson Harry Varvel, Ernest^ Smith anil son, Abbott Robin-j 'in and grandson' Bobby, Mis. Jemina ' Duncan, Mrs. Effie Smith, and Mr. | anl Mrs. Emory Nichols of Fillmore i •F + + + + + Ruasellville Couple Married W ednesday Dora Anderson and Jesse Shalley, ^ iioth of Russellville, were united in , marriage in a urn ^ , r f j here Wednesday afterr .ion by Robert ' H New gent, Justice of the peace The j bridgegroom ia a young farmer They

HI TIER DANCE" BROUGHT ON SUIT FOR DIVORCE

EV ANSVILLE, Ind. (UP)—A ‘butter lance” put on by John Moore, Avondale, led to a divorce suit tried

recently in superiour court.

In listing her reasons for wanting

with th.

money proposition. Also small loan will help

sure and see us. | THE AMERICAN SECIHUYco I

Loans and Financing

II 1-2 E. Wash. St. Phon. s, divorce. Mrs. Moore said that aft I sr a family quarrel her husbaj smeared butter all over the floor w th. n danced on it. ^ In anothei fit of temper, s„ S|J i he tore down a stove pipe and pouiJ

the soot into thebeds.

KITTY LEAGUE SCORES Mullins 14; Ixme Star 7. Double Deck r 7; Phi Delts-t

ANNOUNCEMENT To adapt our business to the terms of the National Re covery Act, the undersigned Beauty Shops have agreed on the following business hours and prices effective Sept I : Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, a. m. fo 5 p. m.; Monday and Friday, 8:30 a. m. to 7 p. m.; Saturday, 8:30 a. m. to 12 noon.

Hair Dye Hair Cut Manicure

Facial (plain) Eye-brow Arch

Finger Waves $ .50 Shampoo .50 Oil Shampoo .75 Color Rinse .25 Marcel .75 Bleach 3.00

Henna Pack without Shampoo Henna Rinse without Shampoo

Eye-Brow & Lash Dye

Hot oil treatment and Shampoo

Shampoo & Finger Wave

Permanent Wave

Permanent End Curls (including Shampoo & Finger

Wave)

HILLMAN’S BEAUTY SHOI JO-JO BEAUTY SHOP RAINBOW BEAUTY SHOI* CO-ED BEAUTY SHOP GODFREY BEAUTY SHOP ENGLISH BEAUTY SHOI*.

3.00

SCHOOL DAYS ARE HKRL \CAI\ ALL METAL Luiit h Boxes

All Colors

6x4x31-4 7 1-2x5 1-4 x 4 Kit with 1-2 Pint Bottle Kit with Pint Bottle

Webb Book Straps, Roller Skates 99c Bicycle Tires Pocket Knives 25c Extra Heavy

BROWNING - HAMMOND IIDW.IO. EAST SIDE SQUARE TELEPHONE 2H

School Shoes Boys’ and ('iris’ sturdy, neat appearing shoes at SPECIAL LOW PRICES I htirsday ... Friday ... Saturday

Tennis Shoes 59c lJ i >

Boys Oxfords 99c 1 "

(•iris Slippers 99c "v

Sandals 79c

SI’KCIAL FOR SATURDAY ON IA I

£»J

•ho I airs of VV omen s Shoes (£1 Hf! ( Any Kmd of Urt-I) _ %»ai v ^ * ,VW mmmt —mtrwr--TwiT--i Merit Shoe Store

South Sidt* Publi - Square