The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 May 1935 — Page 3

[ASSIFIED ads

_For Sale—

Lime dust delivered

l.ere spread on ground. Call A. | h , v Belle Union. 21-31

■ ""c^LFl: F '* ve room modem * ’ naniwood floors, full base- ; garage. Priee $2,800. Box 5, Banner. - r ■ 20 ~° p ' p'TIlFU Bee HIvm, with „ containing starter foundation [ete neW iy painted, eight frame tl , n frame $1 30. I will buy bees , hives or new swarms and pay each. R W. Baldwin, Route 4, [castle, Ind. . _ - ^ ^P-

- 'ILL

^ALB: Any part 1000 bu ear corn. Jno. Wilson, Pall Bros.

ion. Ind-

22-24-27-29-31-1-6p

fcSALE: Cas range lion.

good 22-2p

for Sale on payments or I ‘ ( „ r automoblte. Milton Brown jhor 222t p SALE: Young high producierscy cow. Poland China sows L Bred gilts. Otis Mathews. 21-2p.

r . SALE: 1935 model Grunow hue Radio, used only 5 months, new. See Johnson at Food ■ mornings. 21-2p ■ j —For Rent—

p RENT: Room suitable for a Snan. 407 East Walnut St., 359-X. 21-2t.

—Wanted—

]. :;59-X

ImTED: TWO or three room unLd apartmetlt by young couple. E at Banner. 22-2p

WANTED—300 Fence posts, locust or hedge. Call 816-K. 22-2t WANTED TO BUY: Good Black Walnuts by the ton or bushel. Fall Bt-os., Raccoon, Ind. 22-24-27-29-4p

WANTED: To buy second hand furniture and clothing. Phono 735-X or see Gib Sears. 2 2-2p —Lost—

LOST: . Cameo ..pin, .. Keepsake. Please return to Mrs. L. R. Bain. 736 Fillmore street. Gary, Ind. Reward. 22-2t. —Miscellaneous—

COLLEGE BEAUTY SHOPPE Flngerwave. Marcel, 30c, with Shampoo 50c. Permanents, $2.50, $3, $4, includes Shelton Oil Waves, Ringlet ends, combination. 413 N. College. Ave. Phone 290-X. Hazel Cline. 22-June 5-19-3p

Round Dance at Banner Club, Thursday night. Music by Terre Haute Original Aces. 22-2t

PERMANENTS: Two for $3. Bonat Special. Godfrey Beauty Shop. 804 South College Avenue. 22-lt GRAND PIANO BARGAIN Rather than to reship, will sacrifice beautiful •Baby’ Grand Piano balance due $186.40, on easy terms of $10.00 per month. References required in first letter. For particulars, write Credit Manager, 812 Main street, Anderson, Indiana. 22-3t

are the parents of a daughter, Roselyn, born May 19. Bernice and Anita Spencer called on Thelma and Goldie Calvert Saturday evening. Mr .and Mrs. Paul Forrester and Mrs. Lizzie Collings and grandson Jimmie spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Burks. BAND GOES TO EUROPE "The DePauw Collegians,” a five,iiece dance hand under the guidance >f Bob Gardner. DePauw junior, will oil for Europe this summer, providing music in the two dance salons of 1 e S. S. Berengaria. The band will it.il from New York July 26, touring

FOR SALE: Loose alfalfa hay. Phone Rural 105. 22-2p

b PORTLAND MILLS •* V By Leona Calvert *1 >♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Ray Rivers has purchased a new car. Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Vanhook

DePauw junior, who will play the tiombone and sing with his band. The other DePauw man in the organization is George Losey, saxophone and clarinet player. Herman Binkley. Greencastle, and Fred Hess and Wiant Chance of Indianapolis complete the band. Hess plays the trumpet and mellophono. Chance plays both the piano and saxophone, while Binkley will perform on the drums. Other colleges have been represented by campus bands serving American tourists but this is the first DePauw group to secure a place on an ocean liner. Gardner's band will provide all dance music for afternoon and evening dancing in both the dining salon and the promenade deck. The orchestra will return from Southampton aboard the S. S. Majestic, the world’s largest steamship and will serve on the return trip as dance orchestra for the dancihg pavilions. On their return, plans are being made to complete the trip with a ten day cruise to Bermuda providing music on the liner, Monarch of Bermuda.

rence, Miami, parked and locked his car In the business district here, and when he returned he found two automobiles, identical in appearance. He could not remember his license number and picked what he believed was his. When the door lock wouldn't respond to the key, he went to a locksmith and had another made. When that one failed, he picked up a stone and threw it through the windshield. Then he discovered his mistake. He reported to police, paid for a new windshield, and set himself to the task of memorizing his license number.

BANNER WANT ADS PAY '■ ~ I- — L

FORGETFUL MOTORIST SMASHES WRONG CAR KOKOMO, Ind., (UP)—Guy Law-

Think This One Over The Chevrolet Standard coach delivers in Greencastle for only $574, fully equipped. L. & H. Chevrolet Sales

ROBERT C. GARDNER during a twenty-day stopover in Eng-1 land and Paris. All arrangements were recently i ccmpleted with a representative of L the Cunard White Star Ltd. The g;oup was organized oy Gardner, a

LAST DAZE OF SCHOOL Fillmore Hii»h School Uiiildin^ Friday, Evening, May 24, 1935 8:00 O'CLOCK Auspices Of Fillmore Christian Church, Admission 5c end 10c One hour of Humor hy Local Cast.

AT THE THEATERS

Voncastle

"Age of Indiscretion," showing at theVoncastle theater Wednesday and Thursday, shows graphically the influence of divorce upon the lives ami fate of the children involved. Paul Lukas, Madge Evans, May Robson and little David Jack Holt have the leading roles. It is a dramatic por- 1 trayal of a millionaire mother-in-law's fight to wrest the custody of a child from his divorced father. A great publishing house, a winter cabin in the high Sierras, night clubs, mansions of the rich, ami a huge ice skating rink form the settings for the picture.

Chateau

"Mills of the Gods”, starring Mav Robson, is the attraction at th^ Chateau theater Wednesday an I Thursday. It is the story of a larg ■ industrial plant caught in the grip of the depression. Miss Robson, as the t retired head of the mills, calls in her j worthless brood of children to hepi tide the business over its trying pc-! riod. Instead of aiding their desper-| ate mother, they blunder into a situa

Car Of Frol

At Spectacular Quantity Prices. PRICES Quoted on Five has Lot or more. 100 lb- Bags Starting Math 5>2.39 100 Lb. Scratch Feed $2 00 100 Lb. Growing Mash $2.19 100 Lb. Chick Feed .. $2 20 100 Lb. 32% Suppliment Feed $2.17 100 Lb. 16% Dairy Feed $1 50

\.&R Tea Co.

of Indianapolis spent Saturday nfnoon with Mrs. Jaunita Kendell. Mrs. Pearl Eggers spent the week , end with her sister Mrs Eilna Day

t.on of labor riots ami threats of vio- 0| . Imlia lifi Fay Wray ami Victory Jory Mr aniJ Mra _

lencc.

head the supporting cast.

Granada

“Hold 'Em Yale," showing at the Gianada theater Wednesday and Thursday is from the story by Damon Rynyon. With Patricia Ellis in

Charley Eggers

spent Thursday night with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Eggers. Ida and Laura Steward spent Thursday afternoon with Lulu Wel-

ler.

Robert Johnson spent Saturday

, .... ..

CHAMBERS COOKING SCHOOL TOMORROW AND FRIDAY, MAY 23 AND |24 Held At Our Office At 2 P. M. Each Afternoon Unusual, instructive, and highly entertaining feats of cookery have been planned for you. Ice cream will be made in a «:as range; three foods will be cooked at once, on one burner, with only ten minutes gas. You will have an opportunity to taste the products of the famous Chambers Retained-Heal (Jas Range, in this novel cooking demonstration, under the personal supervision of Miss Alma Chambers Daughter Of The Inventor Cook With the Gas Turned Off

Sea Retalned-Heat Cooking First * Hand on a Beautiful New CHAMBERS 1 5;s , “ d Gas Range Roasting, baking, broiling, boiling and stewing — all will be demonstrated. Watch Miss Chambers prepare a delicious sizzling platter of meat, and vegetables — quickly — right before you. Perhaps you are one of those numerous women who would like to know just a little bit more about broil ing. Here’s your opportunity! new menus NEW RECIPES PREE SAMPLES Above the Black Line Are kleven unusual fkatukis l•’ound on CHAMBERS RANGES Chambers Ranges that do so much for the housewife are not a ny more costly than other good kitchen equipment- Better still, they may be purchased on remarkably easy terms.

tho loading feminine role, the story ] evonjng with c F M odlin. tella ol foul Broadway muggs whoj jjr. and Mm. Marvin Despaln and take over a dizzy young heiress with children 0 f Indianapolis spent the the idea of getting money from her v ,. cek oni , wilh Mrs B , >lle Kt . ck

lather. Before the comedy climax of the picture arrives the boys are glad to get rid of the heiress and even help Yale win a football game from Harvard In order to insure her

marrying the football hero. CHAMBERS COOKING SCHOOL

An interesting feature of the cooking school being presented by the Northern Indiana Power Company, Thursday and Friday afternoons of this week, will be the making of icc cream in a gas range while cookies are baked in the same range at the same time. Still another feature will be the making of old-fashioned flapjacks right on tho cooking top of the same range. Sizzling steaks, just like those served at your favorite restaurant also will be prepared, along with numerous other highly en-

tertaining and instructive feats of cookery. Miss Alma Chambers, daughter of the inventor of the Chambers’ Fireless Gas Range, will offer unusual cookery ideas on her father’s unusual product. Miss Chambers has been reared in a cooking laboratory, having seen the Cham tiers Range develop from a strange looking wooden unit with a built-in gas burner to the beautiful modern range which helps advertise Indiana internationally the home of fine manufacturing.

NORTHERN INDIANA POWER CO

LATE RALLY GIVE DEPAUW VICTORY FRANKLIN, Ind., May 22 Seven j runs in the last three innings enabled DePauw to score a 9 to 3 victory over Franklin in a college baseball game here yesterday. For six innings the contest was a mound battle. Schilling's homer with a man on base gave the Tigers a I two-run lead in the first frame, hut they were blanked during the next five innings hy Vandivier, Franklin hurler, who connected for the circuit In the fourth stanza to put the Baptists ahead. With two out and the bases loadled in DePauw’s half of the seventh frame, the hall took a had hop over second base, when an easy out ap peared likely, and all three runners sprinted home. DePauw 200000 3 2 2-9 7 3 Franklin i o i 100 0 00 S• S Hoey and Schilling: Vandivier, Poison and Nelson.

•■ + + ♦ *r C* *P b NEW MAYSVII.LE !• By Miss Helen Weller

► + + + + ♦ + 4 Cornelius Hyspher, Arthur Wiley of Indianapolis spent the week end

with Mr. and Mrs. John German.

Ora Eggers and Pleasant Malecoat of C. C. C. camp, Spencer spent

the week end with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Asher and daughter

Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Steward and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Cramer, John Cramer spent Sunday with Ida and Laura Steward. VETOES BONUS BILL (Cuntlniied From l*nRe Ob«*> has vetoed a bonus bill or other extraordinary veterans’ benefits. Latest forecast is for the house to over-ride and the senate to sustain Mr. Roosevelt. There were unmistakable indications that Mr. Roosevelt would veto any subsequent bill which may be sent him for immediate cash payment of veterans' compensation cer-

tificates.

The spectacular bonus battle of J9:;5 approached a climax in Senator Huey P. Long's one-man filibuster to prevent the joint session of congress before which Mr. Roosevelt sought to appear. A non-partisan senate coalition smashed tho filibuster last night with a lop-sided vote stinging with rebuke to Long. Long talked more than five hours in an effort to block adoption of the c incur rent resolution hy which house and : "into agreed to met together to-

day.

Congress convened at noon. The s 'nate joined the house shortly afterv ml to hear Mr. Roosevelt at 12:30 • i EST. Some pro-bonus senators feared I ong’s exhibition had hurt bonus chances. Senate majority lender Robinson strode from the chamber lest night after silencing Long, assorting that at least one unexpected vote had been driven to Mr. Roosevelt by the kingfish's tactics. From 2:30 until just past 7:30 p. m. the man from Louisiana held the Poor. He read and rambled from this subject to that. It will be a great celebration over there,” Long shouted, "when the president sends tho soldiers to the how wows. I hot they'll eveh have the movies out for it. ’ We’ve never had a Sir Galahad appearance of a president before. Let him go out on the back doorstep of the White House and read his message through a megaphone.” Long launched his filibuster after Senator Frederick Steiwer, R., Ore., challenged the joint session reception 'T a veto message as unconstitutiond. There had been similar protests As Long moved to command the antijoint session maneuvers most of the support fell away. "All right,” Long continued, eyes rolling, a rebellious tuft of hair arched over his brow, "Listen to him with a blare of trumpets. It is like a movie feature. Movie cameras: microphones! There will be a regular display to listen to Franklin Delano Roosevelt because of the great master has come.” From NRA to I^ouisiana, from Postmaster General James A. Farley to the gallery gods of the 1932 Democratic convention. Long went for words to keep his filibuster going and the joint session resolution from a vote. He read excerpts from Mr. Roosevelt's political speeches. Long hung on until after five hours he needed respite. He got it by requesting a quorum call. Senator Connally obtained the floor and while Long still was arguing that he was not through speaking, Robinson made a point of order that the kingfish had spoken twice in one legislative day on the same subject. And with that senate rule, rarely invoked, Long's filibuster was gagged. The joint session resolution was adopted. 44 to 4.

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