The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 July 1936 — Page 2

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA THURSDAY, .TT L\ 9, 1936.

CANNON’S Friday and Saturday Special Straw Hats

SAILORS 1 EDO 1OYO PANAMA AND LEGHORN All Go at

$1.00 cho,ce Friday and Saturday Only—at CANNON’S

THE DAILY BANNER And Herald Consolidated "It Wave* For Ail”

Mrs. J. L. Etter is reported quite ill at her home on south Indiana street

Entered In the poatofflce at Green castle, 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.

Mrs. Leland Brown returned to her heme Thursday from the county hos-

pital.

SOCIETY

The Christian church choir will meet for rehearsal this evening at

7:30 o'clock.

! \ BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY The Standard of Good Citizenship: And let none of you imagine evil in your hearts against his neighbor; and love no false oath: for all these things I hate, saith the Lord. -Zachariah 8:17.

Mr. and Mrs. Wilford

north of Mt. Meridian, are the parents of a son born Wednesday eve-

ning.

PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS

Mrs. F W. Hixson and Prof. Jerome Hixson left today for Colorado where they will visit Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Hixson

J. W. Query of Cloverdale. who was

Mr. and Mrs Lynn Brown. Northwood, are the parents of a daughter born Thursday afternoon at the Put-

nam county hospital.

Scouts of Troop 99 will meet to-

Ladies Aid Will Entertain Husbands

Members of the Mt. Meridian I Ladies Aid will entertain their hus- ; bands with an ice cream supper j

Tincher, Friday night at 8 o’clock at the .

home of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Knight j Ladies are asked to bring lemons.

and cake.

++++++++ Lodge Inspection To Be Held Friday Inspection by the Worthy Grand ^ Matron of the O. E. S. will be held | at Fillmore Friday evening at 8

SSF. KIDNEY TUBES.

night at 7 o’clork at the high school j 0 ’ c iock. Other chapters to be inbuilding. Report definitely whether j c |uded are Bainbridge and Groveor not you can go to camp this land.

summer.

It was reported here today that a two story frame house belonging to John Donald, south of Pleasant Gari dens was destroyed by fire Thursday

afternoon.

++*+++++

Friday Circle To Meet

With Mrs. Finney

The Friday Circle will meet at the home of Mrs. George Finney, Cemetery road, Friday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. Mrs. Harold Edwards have charge of the program and will

Medical authorities agree that your quent bladder passages ^ dlsrom . amount causing b ^ kldney tubes f ° rt ’ flushing out. This danger tnny t he beginning of nag. ^ing ba^ache. leg rains Joss of^pep g?h1 energy* up nif? » , Tng pufflness under the eyes, headR< rr k rd n nevs Z donTetnpty 3 pints a 8 d n 9 (1 0 f S Vast/* po°. one", 6 mat"4 pon t wait ., h have been used Doan s T ills. neoole for

successiui . frupv give happy relief liVhelDtonush out the 15 Miles of 1 kidney 1 tubes. Get Doan’s Pills at your druggist.

TEMPERATFRES to be lower

HI NT \( COMPLICES CPI LIS, July 0 OT Polr ■ cf Indiana, Ohio and Keni.ilI ]• nned today in the search for thn accomplices of Heber L H kn. former convict. In the mur.i. r of Harry Miller, wealthy retired Cincinnati, O, fire captain. Hi Its allegedly confessed to Capt Matt Leach of the Indiana state po!ire that he hired three assassins to murder the brother of Miss Flora Millet eccentric former opera singer and hls employer. roliee sahl the three men named

by Hicks

criminal records.

seriously Injured July 4th. when his I car crashed into a Pennsylvania

freight train at the Bloomington; " lhum an treatment. Theodore Craw-

slightly. ,e y was t* 16 I’iaintiffs attorney.

county

PROBLEMS TO PRESIDENT

street crossing, is reported

the actual slayers have improving at the Putnam

hospital

The mid-week prayer service of the First Baptist Church will be held Thursday evening of this week at 7:30, instead of 7 o’clock as usual, in the Church basement. Mrs. M. D. Baker, wife of Mr. Baker the Supt. of State Highway, Greencastle district, will give a ten to fifteen minute chalk talk, her own original work, on the theme "Hope". Mrs Baker is a professional artist, a former stu-

dent of the John Herron

Indianapolis

WASHINGTON, July 9 ‘UP’— The problems of American labor— torn by the gravest crisis of many years—were again carried before President Roosevelt today in the hope that he might help to provide

a solution.

BANNER WANT ADS PAY

Leonard Young, who was badly burned Tutsd. y when he came in contact with a liv< electric wire carrying 2300 volts, while working at the old gas plant just south of the Pennsylvania tracks on state road 43. is reported improving at the county hos-

pital.

(Continued From l’n«* “«**>

will been ruined.

But the great corn crop of Iowa—

Johnson against ihave as her subject Modern House- greatest in the eounti\. the potato

member is asked and beans of Michigan; the o.

and barley of Wisconsin: pasturage ami small grain in all The area frem the Rockies to the Pacific and from Arkansas to the Red River

of Canada, may yet be re-

sult for divorce was filed Thurs-

day by William J.

I^uise Johns'n, chaiging cruel and 1 keeping.’’ Each

to bring her favorite recipe.

EUGENE LK.III FUNERAL ON I It I DAY AFTERNOON

I

SAVE EVERY DAY

On Quality Foods At Your Oakley Store

Funeral services for Eugene P.

Institute, Light, who died suddenly Wednes-

day morning, will be held at 3:30 o’clock Friday afternoon from the Presbyterian church with the Rev. V. L. Raphael in charge. Burial will be in Forest Hill Abbey. Friends m./ call at the Rector Funeral Home this evening and tomorrow morning. The casket will remain open an hour prior to the

services in the church.

row

U. S. No. 1 Triumph Or White

rTHEPtitr'wiraCE*]

TO SEEK GOVERNORSHIP

WASHINGTON. July 9 (UP)— Frank Murphy, U. S. High Commissioner tn the Philippine commonwealth, announced today he has resigned his pest to enter the Michigan gubernatorial race.

BEANS

Poik and Beans Or Red Beans

GIANT CANS

29c

COFFEE stSc lb-17c

PAINT I I.LY INJURED

T

MUSTARD, Pure, Quart 10c FLAVORADE, All Flavors, 2 Pkgs 9c ASPARAGUS, No. 1 Tin 10c SPINACH, 1936 Pack, 3 cans 25c POST TOASTIES. Large Pkg. 11c

PFKLES

Budlong Sandwich Pickles

2

15 Oz. JARS

27c

Mayonnaise

Hollieanna’s 12 Pint Jar

17c

PABSTETTE CHEESE

19c

i hr Delicious C heese Food, Pkg

TEA, Gunpowder, Pound 19c CRACKERS, Salted Soda. 2 Lb. Box 14c SALTED PEANUTS, Jumbo, Lb 10c Macaroni, Spaghetti ',‘C4 1 -' SANDWICH SPREAD, Derby, Can 10c CATSUP Stokely’s, 14 Oz. Bottle 12c SALAD

DRESSING

23c

HoUleauna Quart Jar

Tressman Parker suffered a badly cut light hand Wednesday while mixing concrete at his home east of Belle Union, ft was said he severed and artery, requiring a number of stitches In the hand.

WANTED: Old Rags. $125 per hundred (Albert Wood Junk Shop. Phone 756 Y. 9-lp

@Markety

JNDIAN VPOLIS. July 9 'UP) — Livestock Hogs 4.500. Holdovers 675. Weights below 250 lbs. 15 lower. 250-:;oo lbs. 20 to 25 lower. 300 lbs. up 35-50 lower. Packing sows 25 lower. 160-235 lbs. 10 75-10.85. 235-260 lbs 10.60-10 75. 260-300 lbs 10.30-10 60 300 lbs. up 9 50-10 40 130-160 lbs. 10 00-10 50. 100-130 lbs. 9.25-10.00 Packing sows 8 00-8 75 Cattle 700 Calves 500 Slow. Steady to weak market on meagre supply. Top steers and yearlings, fat she stock generally steady. Best steers held above 8.25. Bulk to sell from 7 00-8.00. Top heifers 8.00. Beef cows 4.00-4.75. Cutter grades 3 00-3.75 Yealers steady, 8.50 down. Sheep 1 nOO. Lambs fully 25 higher. Bulk better grades 10 00-10 30. Slaughter t-wes steady 4.50 down.

I. O. O. F. NOTICE

15oz.81-3 c Qt. 121c

FRUITS AND VEGETABLES

Sc Sc

Bananas, Found . . Carrots, Bunch..

Green Beans, 2 lbs. . 15c H. lettuce. !ge. head 10c Oranges, Dozen . ..23c Cantaloupes, 2 for .. 25c

Oakley’s Quality Meat fresh fish ” b Joek sic MILK FED VEAL

Putnam Lodge No. 45 will meet at the hall Friday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock to attend the funeral of the late brother, E P. Light, to be held from the Presbyterian church at 3:30 o’clock. Claral Shinn, N. G.

•F + 't’ + ’F + d*'!’

Section Two

Meeting Postponed

The meeting of Section Two of the, Valley Christian church which was to be vived.

held Friday at the home of Mrs Ray-1 The government has proclaimed mond Herod at Fillmore, has been in- emergency conditions in 268 coun-

definately postponed.

CASH With LOAN ON Vo AUTOMOBliJ furnitubp LIVESTOCK, $20 to a

TERMS To Suit Each Individual

Indiana I

29 1-2 E. Wash.

^oan

ward. The mercury roi e Elmira, N. Y„ 93 in New t and 99 in Columbus, o Almost without exceptJ weather forecast for thC “fair and warmer.’’ F air was forecast for the with apparently no bretf peratures. The forecast | 0! kotas. central and noun sota, and northwestern was “somewhat cooler," occasional showers.

Legislator Dies In Shotgun Fire

ties in Missouri. Oklahoma, South Carolina. Tennessee. Virginia. Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, and

Scuth Dakota.

The drought map revealed a pearshaped area blistered with parched land and withered crops, less expensive than the drought of 1934

ILLINOIS STATE REPRESENTA- bu ^ m0 re devastating in the “emerTIVE SHOT WHILE DRIVING L Pnc y counties than the one or

AI IO MOBILE itwo years ago. The greatest damage, according

CHICAGO. July 9 'UP 1 State ( 0 one j owa authority, meteorologist

9 (UP)

representative John Bolton, militant charleg D R e e d, has been from heat sponsor of a bill in the Illinois legis- J rather than lack of moisture, lature to legalize handbooks in Chi- j Temperatures hovered around the cago. was shot and killed today by 100 degrees yesterday. The maxi-

mums were below the average of

shotgun file into his passing auto- c ] a y b e f ore b U t the heat spread

i across a wider area. Davenport, la., reported 104, Lexington. Ky., 106. Huron. S. D.. 102. Terre Haute. 107, Faribault. Mich., 104 One j Chicago suburb. Melrose Park, re-

ported an unofficial 118.

I The heat spread its damage east-

mobile.

His machine, driverless, careened a wild course of 100 yards down the

street before it crashed into a lamp j nt)

post. I Bolton, serving his fourth term, acted as floor leader in the Assembly for Mayor Edward J. Kelly's bill to legalize handbook betting in Chicago The legislature passed the measure but was unable to push it over Gov. Henry Homer's .veto. The governor's veto was believed responsible for the wide political split which developed later between Kelly ami Horner in the Democratic

gubernatorial primary.

Farmers protected th«e and poultry from the sun. in Warsaw, Ind said his dying from the heat Laia officials said a highway and burst from the aun Minnesota and Michigan u tion officials warned ;■ drought has mn ’e forestij flammable Foresters fighting fires in the B the Dakotas. Intense interest of changes in drought coi heightened by reports prices may boom as a rei pending scarcity Indiana asked permission to ini-n prices one cent a qm Dineen. Wisconsin milk official, said production h 40 pounds on every fami day. Although they have h there will be no scareitr traders maintained booir prices; wheat cl Med on the Chicago exchi futures stimulated by ment crop report rose a bale. Michigan raw vanced 45 cents Rprir head at Chicago stocky ed fear of a cattle feed

PROMISE MORE BEAUTIFUL UHAMPN-EI.YSEE BY 1987

Steak Lb Roast Lb. Stew or Breast, Lb.

15

BFKF STEAK

Good Tender, Lb.

FORK BRAINS,

Fresh Lb.

I’OHK SACSACE

Pure Lb.

FIVER,

Sliced Lb.

VEAE STEAK.

French od Round, lb.

HKOHNI) BEEF

Fre.th l b

MISHAP WITH CIGARETTE ( \l SES FLOOD, NOT FIRE

BRISTOL, Conn (UP 1 Mrs. Lydia Mills dropped her cigarette while she was driving near her home. She leaned over to pick up the lighted cigarette The car struck a fire hydrant. The flood that followed put the car cut of commission and extinguished the cigarette. The water Department shut off the water.

PARIS (UP’—When tourists arrive in Paris in 1937 to visit the French International Fine Arts Exposition they will see a new and beautified Champs-Elysee. ( The Avenue des Champs-Elysees is to have three roadways instead of its present one. This was announced by G. L. Vuitton. vice president of the Amis des Champs Elysees," who, also is father of the project. While the transformation will enhance the Avenue’s beauty, its primary scope is a utilitarian one. The two side roadways are being added to ease traffic considerably, especially during the exposition. The plan does not necessitate any reduction of the width of the exist- J ing roadway, as the space for the j new ones will be taken from the wide 70-fcot sidewalks, each of which will be divided into three sec-

tions.

The sidewalk proper will be reduced to 40 feet. A 10-foot roadway will be cut alongside of the sidewalk for idle traffic while a lane 10 feet wide will he on the outside bordering the main roadway. The present rows of trees will remain untouched fer they will be on the 10-foot section. However, a second row will be added, which will border the outside of the inner walk In appearance, the Champs-Ely-sees will resemble the Avenue de la Grand Armrr. which is a continuation of the “most beautiful avenue in the world.’’ beginning at the other side of the Arch cf Triumph and extending as far as the Bois de Boulogne. Like it, it will have three lines for vehicular traffic and four

spaces for pedestrians.

Mhile the two sideroads primarily Will be for parked traffic, with the exception of parked taxicabs which will continue to he stationed in the middle of the central roadway, those cars and taxis which will have to

I put down or take

A Thrilling Exhibitk

SEE

COL. RAY HENS!

Daredevil driver and Stunt Man in Control demonstration in a 1936.

Safety

KNEE ACTION CHEVROLE Saturday, July 11

North Side Square at 4 P. M

SPONSORED BY

L. & H. CHEVROLET SALES

REMEMBER THE TIME AND PLA< F-.

THE Phone 53

FOOD

SHOf Free Di

INDUSTRIES USE MOKE WATER|use the sideroads

Vuitton’s project

TOLEDO (UP>— Seven hundred Industries, customers of Toledo's water company, increased (heir consumption by 60 per cent in one month according tr> the city's service oirec-

up passengers will

was submitted

sometime ago and was accepted by the technical committee of the city of Parts with “slight modifications ’’ The cost of alteration, which will be borne by the Exposition, is estimated at slightly mon than $200,000.

BEVERAGES 2 Bottles -| tv Plus Bottle Charge XvC Knol-Ade, -ffi All Flavors, 4 for AvC Angel Food Cake l-ed Oi/C Angel Food Cake OO rt Plain &VC Prunes, -j p 2 Eh. Pkg lt)C Apple Butter, 19 oz. Jar 'i A ^ Farmers Pride Flour, Ind. or Quality nf\ 24 Lb. Ui/C Polar Rear or E. Z. rtQ R:<ke, 5 Lbs. (WcfO Iceberg Salad Dressing (jq Quart 4'>)(* Pork and Beans, 1 lb. ran f* Dauntless* DC Fancy Shoe Peg Corn fSQ ^ Dauntless, 2 cans Dreft, |{ojr, size -| ^ • Box Free l DC O. K. Soap, large bar 10 Bars ODC

Meats

Fresh Ground Beef Lb Round Steak

Lb.

Rib Roasts Lb Smoked Hams Rfg End, Lb Bacon, Dry Sugs r f"'*' Lb Cream Cheeac, The Good Kind. Lb Frankfurters, 2 Lbs. Luncheon Meat. 6 delicious varieties l- ! Dried Beef 2 1-2 oz. Glass Pickled Pigs Feet

Jar

Bulk S for . Oleo, 2 For Fruits and Vn’ Oranges Cal. S"" l ' i ‘ Lemons, Sun Freestone Peaches. ’ “ Cantaloupes. .8 f" r New Cobbler Po*” 1 "'

Head la-ltucc,

Head

Fancy Tomato*’,

•; lli