The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 June 1936 — Page 2

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA FRIDAY, JI NK 12, 1!*.%.

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INDIANAI’OI.IS l.l\ ESTOCK Hogs 6.. r )00: holdovers 271; generally 10 cents higher on all weights; 100 to 22. r , lbs.. $10.25 to $10.35; 225 to 260 lbs $1000 to $10.25; 260 to 300 lbs . $9 80 to $10.00; 300 lbs. up, $9 45 to $0 80; 130 to 160 lbs., $9.85 to $10 10; 100 to 130 lbs., $9.10 to $9.60; packing sows $8.00 to $8.75. Cattle 500; calves 700- slaughtei classes mostly steady; very few steers on sale, mostly $8 00 down; heifers downward from $7.75; beef cows $5.00 to $5.75; cutter grades $3.75 to $4.75; vealers steady, good to choice. $8.50 to $9 00. Sheep 500; lambs firm; sheep steady; top spring lambs $11.50; bulk $10 50 to $11 00; fat native ewes moatiy $3.50 down. Sh\ UK.II I*AKADE SATI HDAY The l*hi Delta Kappas and the cast amt chorus ol "Sky High," big three act musical comedy to be presented Tuesday and Weonesday, June 16 and 17. will have a parade Saturday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock. "Sky High” will give you an evening of thrills and laughter. Thr comedy team of Mockshaw and

Mazie (Lyle Green and Marion Ellis) will afford many laughs in months to come. The chorus girls swing into their fast stepping routines with a truly professional air. From the very first moment when a bevy of youngsters sing "The Good Ship Sky High” through to the final song by the entire cast and choruses, "Sky High” is a v/ow. NAMED Af 'IINC 1’RESIDENT (Continued From I'iiko One) porn concert will be played in Gobin church for the visitors and special church services will be held in all the local churches in the morning. Commencement Day will be Monday and Dr. Harold Stoneir, national education director for the American huititutc of Bunking, will be the speaker. He plans to talk on the theme "A Design for Living”. There w II lie a section for visitors who will o< admitted to the exercises without , tickets and there will also be a rei served section. The degrees will be I conferred by President Oxnam. Two hundred and forty-four seniors will i receive degrees and four honorary degrees are also to he awarded. FOR SALE; Yearling ‘Registered’ Aberdeen Angus bull. Dr. E. M Hurst, Cloverdale. 12-3p BANNER WANT ADS PAY

THE DAILY BANNER And Herald Consolidated "It Waves For Ail” Entered In the postoffice at Oreeocastle, Indiana, as second class mall matter under Act of March 8, 1878. Subscription price, 10 cents per week; $3.00 per year by mall In Putnam County; $.3 50 to $5.00 per year by mall outside Putnam County.

Harvey Cox is driving a new Simmons, commissioner of the De-!

Chevrolet truck delivered by the L.

& H. Sales Inc.

Conservation, pointed

\ BIBLE THOI GHT FOR TODAY

partment of

out today.

There is approximately a hundred and twenty thousand acres of pri-

Easton, Pa., arrived here today for a, vaU , ly . owneU , classified forest land in

Indiana while applications for the classification of an additional ten

A complete final rehearsal of the j thousand acres are already on file, ichildren's day program scheduled forj Mr - Simmons reported. Each tract j Sunday evening at the First Baptist j submitted for classification must bej '•hurch wall be held at 7 o'clock this i inspected by a representative of the

‘It’s Just Wonderful!”

Mrs. Rodman Fox and children of

visit with the former's mother Mrs. ]

John Cannon.

evening.

A Promise of Faithfulness; Nevertheless my lovingkindness will I not 1 utterly take from him, nor suffer’

my faithfulness to fail. - Psalms Terre Haute witllin a few (,a y 8 -

89:33.

Ralph Dunkin, who was seriously injured when he fell off a train near Fillmore, May .10th, is reported improving and is expected to return to

PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS

Mrs. st reel, home.

John Moran, north Jackson is reported quite ill at her

IN( )TI(!K - Drhiim Students Trunks shipped at freight rates with express service. Shipping radius—any point within 300 miles. (;i?i:kn< astli: merchants truck LINE Phone 114 or 710-K.

Mrs. Sarah Boswell of Madison township entered the county hospital Friday for treatment. Mrs. James Cook of Boston, Mass., is here to attend the commencement of her son John Cook, a Lambda Chi.

Prof. Charles D. Wilkerson left today for New York where he will sail on the Bremen Saturday night for J! j England. < 1 Dr. Edward Bartlett of this city <, delivered the final address Thurday at the Indiana council of Christian education meeting at Frankfort. Childrens Day Exercises will be held at the Fillmore M - E. church, Sunday evening at 7:30 o’clock. Everyone is invited to attend.

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S E E — SEE — S E E

SKY HIGH PHI DELTA KAPPA SHOW

Tuesday and Wednesday, June 16 - 17

High School Auditorium

KLSERYE SEATS FRIDAY, HANNA’S BOOK STORE X Eig Free Parade Saturday

Mrs. Frank Hartley and daughter Genevieve of Arcadia are spending commencement week with Mrs. Hartley’s mother, Mrs. Betty Hamilton. Mrs. Bruce Frazier has received word of the death of her brother, Frank Moore at Lake Park, Iowa. Funeral services will he conducted at Lake Park. Miss Carolyn Lee, small daughter ! of Mr and Mrs. George Lee, of Phoe- ! nix, Ariz., is spending the summer at St. Joseph's Academy for Girls, at [ Prescott. Ariz. Carolyn is a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. James j Merryweather of this city.

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George York reports that he and his family have enjoyed green beans and beets out of their garden. This is the first report of this kind to reach The Banner this season. Word has been received here announcing the birth of twin sons td Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Bourne of Washington, D. C. Mr. Bourne was a former assistant postmaster at Cloverdale. Mrs. Bourne was formerly Miss Nina Hamblen. Funeral services for Mrs. Mary E Tolin, were held Friday afternoon at 2 o’clock from the home of her daughter Mrs. John Dicks at Morton. The Rev. George B. Jones will be in charge. Interment will be in the Brick Chapel cemetery. Funeral services for Mrs. Jereta Ann Dreher, widow of William Dreher who dide Monday at her home near Reelsville were held Friday afternoon at 2 o’clock from the Big Walnut Chapel church. Elder Lawrence Athey was in charge. Interment was in the Croy Creek ceme-

tery.

The canvassing committee of the First Baptist Sunday school which will conduct house to house visits next week for the Sunday school Is asked to meet at the church Friday evening at eight o'clock. The committee is composed of Mary Stites, Olive Robertson, Mrs. Joe Davis, Mrs. Russell Welch, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rossok, Mrs. Harold Purcell, Katherine Rossok, Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Purcell, Mrs. Milton Klebusch, Mrs. Frank Turner, Harold Thompson, Murel Davis, Mrs. John Westfall, Mrs. Clayton Cash, Mrs Raymond Williams, Mrs. Fred Todd and Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Davies.

KIWANIANS AND WIVES GEESTS AT TI'RKEY RUN Seventy-seven Greencastle Kiwanians and their wives were guests of the Crawfordsville Kiwanis club at a chicken dinner at Turkey Run Thursday evening. The dinner was the result of an attendance contest between the two clubs which Greencastle won. Ladies attending the dinner were given compacts as favors and the men received cigars from the local club. The speaking program was quite brief after which Frank Evans, Crawfordsville Rotarian and DePaOw trustee, showed motion pictures taken on his recent trip to Hawaii. Following the program the clubs enjoyed dancing and cards at the Turkey Run Inn where the dinner was served.

Division of Forestry before it can be accepted and certified to the auditor of the county in which it is located. Indiana’s forest land classification law, enacted in 1921, seeks to encourage reforestation areas for taxation at a valuation of $1 per acre. In return for this low rate of taxation, the owner agrees to make such forestry plantings as may be required, to protect the area from forest fire, and to keep grazing stock out of th" area. No tract of less than three acres can be accepted for classifica-

tion.

One or more tracts of classified forest land are located in each county with the major acreage in sections of southern Indiana where soil and other conditions make agriculture unprofit-

able.

Owners of land which might be acceptable for classification as forest land, can obtain applications and other information by addressing the Division of Forestry, Department of Conservation, State Library Building. Indianapolis.

LANDON - KNOX NOMINATED

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HIGHWAY ( ONTRACTS SIGNED IN MAY EOlt WOKK IN 21 t’O.'s State highway construction and improvement work having a combined cost of two and a third million dollars and located in 21 counties was placed under contract by the State Highway Commission during May, it was reported today by James D. Adams, chairman. A majority of the projects placed under contract (luring the past month, are to be completed during 1936 as a part of the State Highway Commission's 1936 construction progiam. Contracts signed during May provide for the surfacing, grading and paving of 41.49 miles of state highway and feeder roads in Allen. Monroe, Noble, St. Joseph, Clark, Lake, Delaware and Madison counties; for the construction of 26 bridges on state highways in Gibson, Warrick, Vigo, Allen. Whitley, Kush, Blackford, Wells, Hendricks, Boone, and Grant counties; and for the building of eight grade separations at state highway-railroad intersections in Lake, St. Joseph, LaPorte, Parke, Putnam and Clark counties. Completion of these improvements will be another step in the modernization of Indiana's state highway system, made possible to a large extent by the allocation of federal funds to Indiana. Federal funds will finance the highway work, grade separation construction and the building of 18 of the 26 bridges. Eight bridges will be financed with state funds.

(Coiidniied From Piure One) he liked it but he had his own ideas. If the convention was wrong in assuming that the United States constition would permit protection for working women and children, he was in favor of amending it. He approved the endorsement of a sound currency to be preserved at all hazards. But there was no mention of the gold standard in that platform and Landon brought sharply to the convention’s attention his convmtion that a requisite to sound currency is free conversion of that currency into gold. He hedged a little there, acknowledged that no move toward gold should be made until it could be done without upsetting our economic system or damaging agricultmal producers. That was a sop to the farm and forest belt. All through these ceremonies and before the delegates had been clamoring for the nomination. They wanted quick action. But the rules were there to be obeyed and they had required a preliminary roll call of the states in which each in alphabetical order be given an opportunity to place a man or woman before the convention for nomination to the presidency. The first state called was Alabama. Alabama passed. Arizona moved the nomination of

Landon.

That wasn’t the way the leaders had planned it at all. Arizona was supposed to yield to Kansas and Kansas was to send Hamilton up front to do his stuff. Confronted with that situation, Chairman Bertrand H. j Snell ordered the cenvention to back up and start over. He said Arizotia couldn’t offer a nomination in that cavalier fashion. Alibama passed again. Arizona yielded to Kansas. "Who-o-o-p-e-e-e-e,” the delegates

shouted.

The governor had observed the platform pledge to observe the merit system in government employment and to restore, improve and extend it. In firm and direct language Landon informed the convention that this plank should be broad enough to pledge the party to put under civil service all government employes up to the rank of assistant secretary — they are the "little cabinet” members and include all post office department employes. That appeared to mean abolition of the political office of postmaster general a long sought objective of liberals of aP

parties.

The convention took a long collec-

tive breath.

“Good,” exclaimed Frank Knox,

"That fellow has guts.’’

Many another delegate felt that

way about it, that the governor of Kansas had made a bold, courageous move and that he had won friends by it, posibly among men and women who might otherwise have voted for

the new deal next November. The telegram got a demonstration

of approval and Hamilton made his speech. The following demonstration fell short of the mohkeyshine, music, an I madness which usually accompanies the nomination of a popular favorite. Lack of competition soured the show. But it was hot and noisy for a while and Hamilton stood beaming over it all. His sneech went on a bit after the whoopla and then he was through. Another drmon-

r, r Peggy Ann Landon ( "It’s just wonderful,’’ was the comment made on the Republican national convention in Cleveland by Peggy Ann Landon as she watched convention proceedings from. the speakers’ platform, above.

ward Washington in his lower berth. But Wisconsin was contrite. From the Badger delegation came the motion to make the nomination unanimous and it was done, the “yeas” thundering to the vaulted ceiling and back again in a tumultous mingling

Ohiigations' aiHi "('.'jy,. ' ^ '] ftttional .Money || SEE I S TODAY Indiana Loan Co. 24( 2 E. Washington sin-.l Of sound that might ■ ( , st reached to Topeka n ,|„ The governor was sitting u , study, listening to • may have recognizi ' the , Curl G. Bachmarm r: v, , , when that state’s \ ;, nounced It is not liknv . j knew the lone Borah v i, , mam's own, the last | c i n t ,| of (he man who manage! s-ni ium F. Borah’s e.'impgj,,,, fo | nomination. And there was more .lenirnsj tin n. Hamilton sat iin aolenin for a while j pus ml before he secniej that the objective tov. ird v , hid been driving with all his headed vigor was «!(!••• • : i;i came around and breath, ; natt in time and finally -at U : str to take a keen if .!, t , derstanding interest : t j performance of the cvenin. young lawyer from Topeka i, | shot now.

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APPLY NOW TO GET LAND CLASSIFIED AS FOREST AREAS

Hoosier landowners who have areas' 8 tration

suitable for timber production andj Wisconsin tried to switch around wish to take advantage of Indiana's b(Jt thinff8 were mov|nK too faat The forest land classification law, should count was totalled Landon 98V file their applications with the Divis- Borah 1B ant , HO into th( , ’ . ion of Forestry this month, Virgil M\ booka while the senator rolled to-

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12 West Washington St.

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