The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 August 1936 — Page 3

STARTS PROMPTLY AT 8:00 A. M.

THURSDAY MORNING

01)1) ' «> l

Children’s Sheer Dresses and Print Pajamas

For Aim list anil September wear, many attractive styles trom hiKher priced i> roups.

25

EAC II

—1

12 MOMME PONGEE i5cyd

Distinctive Dress Prints MALABAR

Fine Percale

19

e

yd.

36 inches wide. A lovely, closely woven cotton. Dozens of beautiful patterns . . . florals, stripes, plaids and novelties. Nice, bright colors and dark ones, too. Malabar wears and washes well.

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MK. CHAPMAN, Ol K BOSS, HAS CONE AW AY ON HIS VACATION. WHILE HE IS AWAY YY'E 'THE EMPLOYEES* WANT TO SHOW HIM W E CAN Rl'N THIS HI SINESS AS W ELL AS HE ( AN! WELL HA AT K) PROY'E OIK POINT WITH FUJI TIES, ANT) THAT MEANS WE LL HAA E TO SELL A LOT OF OOODS. WERE (iOlNti K> DO THAT BY OFKEKINO BAKt. YINS SO EXt EPTIONAl THAT rtol YYoVT BE ABEE IO RESIST THEM. THEM VKE Ol'PORTI MTY HAAS FOR A Ol AS WELL AS FOR I n_sd w ATCH PENNEYS! Signed: GENE BRITE, Assistant Manager.

For Fall Smartness Tweedee Prints

15

yard

Make some Fall frocks of this smart tweedy-looking cotton in the new dark tones. Easy to sew and extremely wearable for so many occasions. Vat dyed, fast colors. 35"' , 36" wide.

^ K

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w

“HOPE” MUSLIN 84c yd. THE PRIDE OF PENNEY'S „ 9 COTTONS . . ”

From what our customers say we hnou we have a right to be proud of our RONDO percales We've never seen better at this price anywhere Wash-fast colors. 36 inches wide.

IT

(MYMODE HOSE -,0c pair Discoiitliiiied iiuniliers taken from our regular stock. These are all perleet, full fashioned, pure thread silk Hose at this unusual price! 2 WAY STRETCH LASTEX GIRDLES EACH Marie Moore says, “It does seem a shame to sell siieh lovely girdles for this low price." Bui we want business, Marie, so out they go! Flesh color.

BOYS, LOOK! lot KEY STYLE CAPS 25c EACH "ith your ehoiee of Presidential candidate's name on it! Long visors, blue and "itli round knob on top!

M( I3\ WARNS DANGERS UK IN sr k room JOKING ,II( v:r) (TP) Henety visitors 'nter the sickroom with boomAl ii-intentioncd reterences to 1 , 'n,'Ue or operating room actualriav ^come a contributing factor Patient's death, acconling to Dr. ' rfl H Lake, editor of Clinical lcinp and Surgery. people, except experienced j ( "' ans - know how to tnlk to an '■ V s i<k man.'' he said, writing in Radiologic Review. •a-dbrious anecdotes all too fre'V contribute to an unfavorable come u ’ Patient who worrtes or Is always h a» an uphill fight to ' the physician said, h ,, J' itr ° r worry need not be q -iU" 1 to physical condition. A cai' . " because he is '"'R e n°ugh life insurance;

because his rent is overdue. “A woman may be violently perturbed because she has discovered a few gray hairs or 'crow's feet’; because she fears she is losing her husband’s love. Both men and women have died because they feared the loss of friends or social position, or had a feeling of of remorse for past mistakes. Such fears and worries, he said, “are not immaterial and foolish and they deserve the earnest attention and study of the physicians who aspire to -achieve high and lasting success.’* Deeply hidden mental or physical reactions frequently result from acts which the individual recognizes as opposed to his own or the community's code of morals, the physician said. Emotional instability caused by faulty heredity or dysgenlc matings often is an important factor in caus-

ing and petpetuating distressing symptoms,’ Dr. Lake said. Most of these persons, he said, are “chronics’* who for years have been going from one physician to another with but little relief. Sofne have been .inadequately prescribed for, others have been dismissed brusquely and told nothing was wrong. “In the latter ease it is unscientific and untrue to declare that nothing ails the patient. If he w“re no ill he would not have sought medical advice. His psyche is as much a part of his organism as is his thorax or abdomen and, until it has been painstakingly examined, the study of the case is incomplete,” the physician said. The emotionally unstable person frequently finds himself unable or unwilling to face the true cause of his distress, he said. The man who “cannot tell a lie” has no place in the medical profes-

sion, according to Dr. Lake. “Many a man has recovered from pneumonia or gastric ulcer because his medical attendant h,.d the good sense to assure him that ho suffered from bronchitis or gastritis, when a knowledge of the true nature of his disease would have excited so strong a fear as to break down nis powers of resistance.” Dr. Lake said such treatment was not to be taken as a general recommendation. Patients, he paid, should be individualized.

STRATA' SHOAVS ACCIDENT TOLL HIGH ON FARMS NEW YORK 'UP 1 Farming ranks first as a hazardous occupation with fatal accidents, averaging 4,400 annually. a suivey by the Country Life magazine reveals. “In a factory,” the farm publication says, “when* machines are inspected regularly and carefully, ac-

cidents are regularly few. In almost

every occupation accidents are foreseen and forestalled. But recognizing and eliminating potential accident hazards in farming is far more of as job because of their wide variety and their deceptive commonplaceness. I “There are three major and frequent causes of farm accidents: poor^ repair of farm buildings, careless j handling of livestock and improper j use of farm equipment. And the sadi part about all these accidents, is that they are unnecessary. They could easily be prevented.” It is the little things that cause the most tragedy loose floorboards. I broken stair treads, defective stepladders, loose matches improperly marked poisons, improper use of kerosene and gasoline, not keeping a] close eye on the bull in the pasture lot, and so forth, the magazine says. An then, of course, there’s fire, which last year cast farms and rural towns u quarter of a billion dollars.

EXAMPLES of our BLUE RIBBON VALUE

up-a week GOODYEAR SPEEDWAY Size Price per week

30x3'z Cl

46c

4.40-21

51c

4.50-20

54c

4.75-19

59c

5.00-19

63c

5.25-18

70c

Other sizes in iiroportion

£ World's greatest low price ^ lire. Big, Husky, Thick / * Standard Speedways. Cen- / ter Traction Tread

BUY NO TIRES BEFORE YOU COME IN AND SEE OUR unbeatable: VALUES J

ALLWEATHER

PATHFINDER World's first choice tire for economy

largest selling tire on earth

Size

Price ner week

Size

Price ner week

30 x 3 Cl

Sic

4 5021

80c

4.40-21

65c

4.75-19

84c

4.75-19

7Gc

5.25 17

97c

5 00 19

£2c

5.50-17

$1.10

5.25-18

SCo

6.00 16

1.22

5.50 17

99c

Other sizes in proportion

1 1

in propoit.c t

DOBSS Tire and Battery Service j j KENNETH DUNKIN, Mgr.

1

TWO BOYS DIVE IN SUIT M ADE BY OWN HANDS JEFFERSON, O., 'UP) — Robert Topper, 14, anil Norman Orford, 15, have converted an old boilertop into a diving helmet, and with the aid of two automobile pumps, several feet of hose and an old telephone set they are able to explore the bottom of Lake Erie. The ’’tjoiler-top*' helmet, weighing 100 poumls, is complete with an airpressure adjusting device, glass face, "lifeline,” and telephone sending and

receiving system. The helmet fils over the diver’s shoulders, with two leather straps running under the arms to hold it in place. Rubber tubing around the part contacting the diver’s boily prevent the diving set from leaking. Three persons are necessary to operate the “shallow- water” diving unit. Two pump air into a compression storage tank, the third slides the helmet over his head and slips ilown into the depth for a lake-bottom stroll.