The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 August 1936 — Page 2

THE DAILY BANNER, GREEN CASTTJ3, INDIANA NAT HU) A Y. AUGUST UT6.

UTAWADS

LOST—Girl’s Ingersol wrist, watch about two weeks ago Reward. Finder return to Banner. 28-2t

—For Sai.

THE DAILY BANNEK

And

Herald Consolidated ‘Tt Waves For All"

Softball News

FOR SALE OR RENT: Six room house at Hanna Court. Available about Sept. lJ5th. Inquire at 5 Hanna } End. Court. 22-tf

—Wanted/—

WANTED—Will spread lime on | Entered In the poetofflee at O"* 0 * I your farm or rent to you end gate castle, Indiana, as second clsss mal spreader or two w'neel spreader, 20c matter under Act of March 8, 1878. per acre. Walter, s. Campbell. South Subscription price, 10 cents per I

19 22-2G-29-4t week; $3.00 per year by mall In Put-

CLtTB STANDING National league

FOR SALE,: Philco radio table 1936 model, floor lamps and sateen wool comfort, 209 east Seminary Street. 24-tf FOR SALE Modern and scmtrnodern dwellings. For cash and payFerd i was. 25-5t FOR SALE Modem bi ick dwc',1. j ing, known as Brockaway home, jast Washington street; very rpasc jahle. Ferd Lucas. 25-5t FOR SALE My mod< ri eight room hoase and dauble fr/rage; also three room house on so,nth side of my house. Will sell r>ne or both. Priced to sell. Local ed in Fillmore, Bouth of Fillmore State Bank. Corner lots. Walter S. Campbell. 2«-29-2t

WANTED j Woman for housework. „ .

„ „„ by mail outside Putnam County.

References required, Box Y. 28-3t

WAN'TED: Competent and reliable! tenant farmer with own equipment ! for '200-acre combination stock and gr-jiin farm, Putnam county. Good f cnees, buildings, woods pasture and spring water. Farm available now. Reply and give references to Box 29, ] care Banner. 29-5-2t'

PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS

James O’Hair is spending a few

days in Chicago.

Mrs. Fred Kendall of Roachdale entered the county hospital Friday |

for treatment.

Boyd left Saturday O., and Covington,

FOR SALE: 'Two registered Shropshire rams and three yearling rams. John W. Day, Fillmore, Ind. 29-5-12-19-4p

WANTED: Farm, not over $1600 on terms, good school, stream, woods pasture, part cultivable. Describe

fully. Box 237, R. R. No. 5, Frank- Mn| j ackson : ' ort ’ Ind I 28-tp f^r Cincinnati,

WANTED- Work on farm by day. K V" for a two weeks visit with rela-

Can give good references Address j t ' voa ani * friends.

Postoffice Box 103, Clovei dale 2?-3p ^ Fret i Thomas went to French Lick

^ ^ j this afternoon to attend the night

1VI iSCelIai1»OU$*-- session of the state Democratic Edi-

NOTICE: Call Louis Williams.' torial Association.

Phone r>10-Y, City garbage collector. I

6-tf j

W

L

Pet.

Midwest

10

2

.833

Zinc Mill

... 9

2

.818

Merchants

... 9

4

.672

Sinclair

.. 4

8

.333

Coca Cola

... 3

11

.222

Laundry

... 2

10

.166

Federal league

W

L

Pet.

Lone Star

.. 12

0

1000

Colored Giants

.... 9

3

.750

Kiwanis

... 7

4

.636

Rotary

... 7

5

.583

Kroger

... 4

7

.363

Christian Churcli .

... 3

8

.272

State Highway

... 2

8

.200

Fillmore Specials .

... 1

9

.100

daughter Freda have returned home from a trip to South Carolina anti along the eastern coast. Mrs. Pearl Frank and children spent the weekend in Rockville. Max Giltz spent Saturday with Lloyd O’Haver. Mrs. Josephine Burk attended the funeral of Mrs. Waiter Crawford in Greencastle Thursday afternoon. Glen Clodfelter and family of Lafayette spent Monday and Tuesday with Mrs. Carrie Clodfelter.

^SOCIETY t^Trr-

LEAGUE SCHEDULE

31—7:00 Zinc Miiil vs Laun-

FOR SALE: Choice Duroc spring hoars and gilts. Kenneth Morrison, Cloverdale, R. 2. 20-21-27-28-4F FOR SALE—Apples and sugar pears. Many fell in the storm. Buy while you can. McCullough orchard. 29-lt

FOR SALE—Ask your neighbor about what it costs to operate a John Deere tractor. Less than 50 cents per acre to put a corn crop in and tend it. Walter S. Campbell. 26-29-2t FOR SALE: Pure bred Polled Shorthorn calves, also registered .service bull. W. J. Alice, Greencastle, Jnd. 27-3p

Mrs. S. M. Brown and son Sherman Brown and wife have returned

LOST-White Spitz and fox ter-| to their home in Woodstock. 111., afrier, left eye black, small brown * er v * s *ting Mr. and Mrs. Clay Mc-

eye

spot in black.

-Midwest vs Merchants. -Colored Giants vs Christian

Kiwanis vs Chris-

Reward. Babe Conklin. *' wCe -

28-2t j Miss Betty Ruth Oxnam and Miss Heifer found on my farm. HermTn | Bett y Brooks returnc<1 Frlday fro ™ Neat Greencastle Route one. Owner' Wilton ' Mainc ’ wher ‘' they have spent pay cost 29-lp the summer in Cani P Klneowatha. Betty Ruth will spend a few days in

See the Covered Wagon Trailers on Greencastle the guest of Miss Brooks

display in the Cook building on the north side of the square. See R. R. Neal, agent, or L. L. Messersmith. 29-lp

before going to her home in Omaha, Neb.

Aug.

dry. 8.00 9:00

Church.

Sept. 1—7:00 tian Church.

8:00—Laundry vs Sinclair. 9:00—Rotary vs Fillmore. Sept. 2 -7:00 Christian Church vs

Kroger.

8:00—Sinclair vs Zinc Mill. 9:00—Kiwanis vs State Highway. Sept. 3—7:00—Kroger vs State Highway. 8:00- Midwest vs Laundry. 9:00—Colored Giants vs Rotary. Sept. 4—7:00 Lone Star vs Fill-

more.

8:00—Midwest vs Zinc Mill. 9:00—Kroger vs State Highway.

THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Victor L. Raphael, Minister. Miss Sadie Moor, Organist. Church school 9:30 A. M. Missions

Sunday.

Morning worship 10:35 A. M.

Music: ''Prelude’’ Chopin. Offertory "Saiut d’ Amour”.

Sermon theme: "Tackling the Dif-

:icuit. ’

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Gust Emil Carlson, minister.

FOR SALE: 5-room modem house, newly decorated. 6:30 East Walnut,

27-3t

FOR SALE: De-Light

Heatrola;

Havana Cook stove, both

in good

condition. Reasonable. 403

W. Wash-

ington or Phone 138-K.

28-2p

MRS. HOFDINT CHOOSES HALLOWE’EN FOR SEANCE

HOLLYWOOD. Cal., (UP) — On! Hallowe’en night, Oct. 31, 1936, Mrs. j Harry Houdini, widow of the cele-

brated magician, will make a final j PHEASANT CROP IN MINNE-

Vacation time is not only a play time for children. Mother reeds a vacation too. Sending the washing to the laundry will help a lot. Home Laundry & Cleaners. 29-lt

FOR SALE: Fifty acres, three miles west Clinton Falls, Four room house, bam 48 x 48, outbuildings, two good wells, fruit. For sale until sold. Odus MyClain and sisters. 28-3p

-For Rent-

FGR ftENT — Modern dwellings, apartments furnished and unfurnished. Ferd Lucas. 25-5t

FOR RENT: Modern unfurnished apartment. 808 South Indiana street. 28-tf

FOR RENT—Modern three room apartment at 426 Anderson street. Available September 1. 27-29-2t FOR RENT—Lower modem apartment at 721 East Seminary street. Heat and water furnirhed. E. A. Browning. 6-tf

FOR RENT: Modem 2 room apartment with dressing room and private bath on ground floor. Front and back entrance. Steam heat. Phone 557. 29-lt FOR RENT: Ail or part of 38 acre farm at Clinton Falls, terms if advisable. Cash rent pieferred. See Mrs. Lillian Smith at George Frank’s residence. 29-2p

SOT A BRAVES DROUTH

MINNEAPOLIS. Minn. (UP) — Minnesota’s nimrods are assured a good pheasant hunting season next fall, despite this summer’s severe drouth, according to Dr. Ralph Wing of the game management division of

the University of Minnesota farm.

King said recent inspection tours through the pheasant hunting areas of northern Minnesota indicated that the drough has had little effect on the preasant population because of good nesting conditions last spring. Young pheasants went into the dry summer months in excellent condition and most were able to shift for themselves by the time the drouth

Mrs. Houdini explains, is the result became severe, King said. He believes of an agreement made with her hus- [ birds will suffer only in areas where

attempt to establish contact with the spirit of her dead husband, she an-

nounces.

Furthermore, she says, it will be a "seance to end all seances.” If no response is received at that

time, Mrs. Houdini declares she will make no further effort to that end.

In addition, she hopes that it will

end the stream of persons who Qpme to her constantly with the declaration that they have been in contact with the spirit of the magician. At the present time she deciires she is

approached by them every day. Hallowe’en night of this year will

be exactly the tenth anniversary of the death of Houdini. The attempt

to establish a contact with his s

nirit, !

band before he died, when pre-ar-ranged signals and other details of the attempt were established between

them.

“I want to hold the attempt in the open air so as many people ns possible can be present,’’ says Mrs. Houdini. “But I won’t accept any message as authentic unless it comes to me.” For the past 10 years. Mrs. Houdini says, a light has burned in Houdini’s shrine at the Laurel Canyon home near Hollywood. “But if Houdini does not answer at this one last seance there wi'l he no need to keep the light burning longer,” she states. “October 31st is Hallowe’en, and if a spirit won’t come then, T don’t think there's much chance it ever will,” is her final conclus.on on the subject.

DO YOU REMEMBER THE NEWS?

One of five possible choices correctly completes each of the statements made below. The statements are selected from articles of widespread Interest in the news of the past week. Pick your answers and compare them with the correct results on page four.

1. Citizens throughout the United States and possessions are mourning the death of George H. Dern, President Roosevelt’s (A) secretary of commerce. (B) secretary of the navy, (C) attorney-general, (D) secretary of war, (E) secretary of state. 2. Eleven persons were killed and three injured wnen an airplane crashed into a river in (A) Germany, (B) China, (C) Spain, (D) India, (E) Russia. 3. Government officials have ruled that Leon Trotzky, accused by the Soviet government of planning the assassination of Stalin, has violated his conditions of asylum at his refuge in (A) Germany, (B) Norway. (C) Sweden, (D) F-ance, (E) England. 4. A million dollar slander case, about ready to go on trial In New York, names as the defendant (A) Mary Astor, (B) Mary Bickford, (C) Rudy Vallee, (D) Max Schmelling, (E) Max Baer. 5. Or.' 1 person was killed and fif-

teen injured in a recent riot in the state prison of (A) Oklahoma, (B) Minnesota, (C) North Carolina, (D)

Louisiana, (E) Georgia.

! all feed has been burned out. But , Minnesota, he explained, has escaped most of the intense, crop-killing drouth. Ruffled grouse, King said, will show a marked decrease this year. Tile end of their 10-year cycle this year, rather than the heat, is responsible, he said. King explained that it is not uncommon to have and 85 per cent loss of ruffled grouse during their regular cycle de-

cline.

Feed conditions this winter, King said, probably will be bad and artifical feeding plans are being made. Good cover also must be provided to carry the birds through a winter as severe as that of 1935.

PUBLIC SALE Of Hogs and Dairy Cattle I will sell al 1’iiMir Auction on my farm, 3-4 mile went and 1-4 mile north of Milligan and 2 miles south of Waveland, Ind. Tues., September 1, 1936

the fol-

1‘KINCE FORGETS THRONE MANILA, (UP) — Datu Ombra, member of the National Assembly, but also the husband and royal consort of Princess Dayang Dayang, acting Sultan of Sulu, displays more of the characteristics of an American congressman than those of an aspirant to a throne. Immediately upon his arrival here from Jolo, capital of the Province of Sulu, which he represents in the national assembly, Datu Ombra, instead of making any pretensions to one day sitting by the side of his royal wife on the throne of Sulu, filed 10 appropriation bills for public works in the Province of Sulu. These bills, totaling about .$100 000, called for about everything from wharVes, roadways, a monument to Jose Rizal, “Father of PhMippine Independence,’ schools, ranging from emergency and primary ones to high schools, a complete radio station and everything else that the Province of Sulu needs. After first doing his duty thus to his constituents, Datu Ombra took time out to satisfy a little the natural curiosity of his colleagues and the press about the real status of the affairs of the acting Sultan of Sulu,

his wife.

"The Sultanate (or succession of Sulu) is a dead issue” he declared, “and peace reigns all over the province. There is no law or tradition to

Missionary Society To Meet Tuesday The Missionary Society of the First Baptist church will meet Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. September 1st, with Mrs. Charles M. Ewing, south of town. The program will be under the direction of Mrs. Harold Purcell, her subject will be "Highway Of Service.’’ Adequate transportation has been secured and all wishing transportation are asked to meet at the church or at the home of Mrs. Russell Welch, 502 Bloomington street by 2 o’clock. The Missionary Society is sponsoring a program which is to lx 1 given at the First Baptist church September 4th at 7:30 o’clock. The public is

invited.

-I- -J- -I* 4* 4" *9

Young Married Women’s Class To Meet Tuesday

The Young Married Women's Class of the Gobin Memiorial Church will hold their first social meeting Tuesday evening, September 1, at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Archie Allen, 709 S. Locust St. Mrs. Earl

Allen and Mrs. Frank Stoessel will! ... , , , “ . .

__ I White will lead the devotional period

Bible School, 9:30 a. m. Murel Davis, superintendent. Morning worship, 10:30 a. m. Message: "The Uplifted Christ.’’ State Fann Service, 2:00 p. m. Unions Primary, Junior, Intermediate, Senior, B. A. U.—7:00 p. m. The Senior union will have in installation service. Evening evangelistic service. 8:00 p. m. lb Rie Tine Light.” The Trustees of the Church will meet at the church Monday evening

at 7 p. m.

The monthly S. S. Council will meet Monday evening at 7 p. m. A Teacher Training course will be started at this meeting, using the book, "The Life of Christ" Lee. Mrs. S. E. Davies

will teach the class.

The business session of the church will be hclil Monday evening at 8 p. ni. All oficcrs are expected to be present and as many of the members as possibly can are urged to be in

attendance, also.

The Woman's Missionary Society will meet Tuesday, 2:30 p. m. with Mrs. C. M. Ewing. Mrs. Charles

Pool YourD« Tlioro is a VUer pay your debts tk in sv scattered bit anil' way, it’s by combing you owe in (me olilij^j then pay it oat by moly payments. An Indiana Loan ena ' n you to pay ev body at once. LOANS UP TO S Indiana Loan ”4i/j E. Washington Pho*

assist the hostess and Mrs. E. R. Bartlett will present the program. ^ + + •!• + + +,+ 4 4 1 4 4> + ♦ 4- BAINBRIDGE v £^+4* + 4» + 4 + + + + + + + 4*4j| Mrs. Nellie Sharp spent the weekend with Ora Sutherlin at Russell-

ville and Tom Roach at Morton.

Mrs. Nellie Miller visited relatives

in Indianapolis last week.

Ray Graham has pui chased the property of Alva Pruitt and moved

this week.

Mr. and Mrs. H. Q. James entertained at dinner last we“k for his brother and family of Detroit, Mich. Mrs. Wilbur Priest spent last weekend with her sister Mrs. Cecil Morris and family at Springfield, 111. Mrs. Marjorie Shockney was a guest of Louise Jones of Brick Chapel last week. Mrs. Lena Todd spent Wednesday and Thursday with friends in Green-

castle.

Max Smith of Indianapolis Is visitin grelatives here during his vaca-

tion.

Mrs. Emma Blackwel’ and son Paul and Mrs. Will Salsbury of Crawfordsville called on friends here Sunday afternoon. | Mrs. Charles Frakes is p guest of relatives in Crawfordsville this I week. | Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Miller, east of

and Mrs. Harold Purcell will have charge of the lesson, "Highway of

Service.”

Mid-week prayer service in the Church basement, Thursday evening

at 7:30.

GOBIN MEMORIAL CHURCH j Claufle M. McClure, mridster. Carmen Siewert, acting minister of

music.

E. R. Bartlett, Church School Supt. Nevo Warne, church secretary 1 . 9:15 a. m. Sunday Church School. 10:00 a. m. Morning Worship. Dr. J. E. Porter, preaching. Subject: Adventurous Christian

Living.”

Music—Prelude Niemann. Violin Solo Jean Stewart. Offertory - Meditation, Mendelssohn.

6:00 p. m. High

League.

Sunday N

00-

You can get FRIED UHICKEt BAKED ( Hide

OR

VEAL With Mushroom S'in*

at the

LINCOLN billing Koo)

j vehicle department are waf fight over the speed limit in ft' proper. The motor veh'cie d( ' ment has placed large sijns In the speed to 30 miles per hour | the city council’s limit is fOml

hour.

Previews and Reviews AT LOCAL THEA"

Subjeet — “Cooperate

with God.”

Leader Betty Broadstreet.

Vonrastle

Robert Taylor and Barbara wyck are co-starred in “His er’s Wife,” Sunday and Honda traction at the Voncanle tt

I Jean Hersholt heads the supft

School Epworth cast.

| Taylor appears as a sorntifi

Creatively piorcr wno meets and falls n

with Barbara Stanwvi k just i he is to leave on an e.xpi i:ti fl the jungles. His brother uw boy to forget the mil and ear , with the expedition He agree °f in her rebellion the girl marrit | brother. Returning from the]

f'oinmeneing at I :()0 p. m. lowing described stock:

6. After a trial on a drunken driv- i . . „ ..

( (>\\S—1 .icrsey cow, 6 years old,

ing charge in a crowdi l Massa- heifer calf by side, giving nice flow chusetts courtroom acquittal was of milk; 1 Jersey cow, 4 years old, returned in favor of a fester son of heifer calf by side, giving 3 1-2 gal, (A' A1 Smith (B) Secretary Tekes |M>r day: 1 5 years old, A, Ai smith, <h> m i ntmy ick. s. fppsll bv (|ay „ f saKp 4_ Ka |, OI1 cow (C) Secretary Wallace, (I)) Cover- when fresh; I Jersey and Guernsey nor Lehman, (E) Mayor LaGuardia. j cow. 8 years old, bo fresh by sale

bar Princess Dayang Dayang from

occupying the throne since the death j ^ own > have purchased the property of j

of her uncle, the late Sultan Jama-, lulu Klram. Likewise, the princess

has the support of the great major-

ity of the Suluanos.”

About the only question which Datu Ombra refused to answer was j whether he eventually w,.uld ascend to the sultanate himself as the con- j sort of his princess wife, the present

acting Sultan of Sulu.

Instead, he made it clear that like ! a real congressman he will remain at Manila as long as the national assembly is in session and fight for the passage of his appropriation bills for the improvements which he feels

his province needs.

USE OF MOTORS ON i SI’RFBOATS BELIEVED NEAR

Charles Beck, and will move soon. Mrs. Jesise Lane, Mrs. iriice Priest, Mrs. Effie Smith. Mrs. Maude Codings, Mrs. Alma Leyenberger and Mrs. Muriel Nelson were guests at ' the Groveland club meeting held at ■ the home of Mrs. Ren Solomon |

Thursday.

FIRST ( HRIKTIAN CHURCH Robert Talmage Beck, Minister. Mrs. E. R. Bartley, director

Church School.

On account of the animal county the fever-haunted explon; finds meeting at Somerset, there will be self in love with his brother's» no services held Sunday, Aug. 30. It still infatuated with Taylor is hoped as many as can will attend returns with him to tiv jun?! the county meeting. I that her husband can divorce he Rev. Beck wil be in the pulpit the marry another woman iir t Sunday in September and all again free she discovers fiat sir regular services will be resumed. (also lost the love of the one me

wanted. Many interesting anJ usual situations an included

film.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH

Released in Poland ER9B

HONOLULU (UP) — Aluminum

• 7. President Roosevelt will confer Aith Governor Landon and three other midwest governors on drought relief in a meeting scheduled for September 1 at (A) Dos Moines, (B) Davenport, (C) Topeka, (D) Lincoln, (E) Kansas City. 8. The midwest anil the entire na’ion were shocked at the recent death of Governor Floyd B. O! ;on of (A) Wisconsin. (B) Iowa. (C) Minnesota, (D) North Dakota, (E) South

Dakota.

9. A 36-year old mother of ten living children recently gave birth to lextuplets, five stillborn, in (A) Ar-

kansas, (B) Missouri, (C) Kansas, i 1,1,1 in spring, a good one.

dale, a real cow; one 8-year old Jersey heifer, lie fresh by day of sale, a nice prospect; 1 Jersey cow, 8 years old, giving 8 gal. per day, a hightesting cow; 1 Jersey row, 5 years old,giving 8 gal. milk per day, ean he registered, an extra niee cow; 1 Jersey heifer, 8 years old, giving 2 gal. |a»r day, testing 7 per rent; 1 Jersey cow, 7 years old, a 4-gal. cow when fresh, and giving a good flow of milk now. This Is an extra nlee lot of rows, both as to quality and pro-

durtlon.

HOGS—65 head of feeding shouts, weighing from 80 to 125 lbs., Duroc and Poland crossed, a nice herd of shunts and in good shape. 6 Duroc sows, to farrow In September and October. I Duroc male hog, 2 years

(D) Tennessee, (E) Colorado. 10. A half million dollar slander j suit against Aime Semple McPherson was settled out of court In Los AnXeles for the reported sum of (A) $150,000, (B) $100,000. (C) $50,000, (D) $5,000, (E) $500.

TERMS—CASH. J. 0. PORTER Col. ( has. Asbury, Auctioneer. Harry Ramsey, Clerk.

MANNER WANT ADS PAY

surfboards, boards with outboard motors and a “tail" will help popul-j arize Hawaii’s famed spo-t of surf- 1 riding in other parts of the world, I according to Tom Blake, expert surfer and member of the Waikiki' beach patrol. Blake has perfected a new hollow! surfboard, constructed of Georgia cypress wood, which he says is par-! ticularly adapted for big waves. It* weighs 116 pounds and can be ridden ) in 30-foot waves. But for localities where there is no: .surf, Blake predicts that a motorized surfboard with a protected propeller, now being developed, will give swimmers on lakes and inland waterfronts a chance to use a board. Blake has introduced another innovation in attaching a fin or stabilizer to the bottom of the board at the stem to help steering. A metal board could be still lighter and more durable, he said. !• + + + + + + + V MORTON + l- + 4--h*4 + + Lee Miller and family tr.ok a fishing trip to northern Indiana and Michigan this week. Mr. and Mrs., \y. S. Lawler and 1

Unconditional release of Mrs. F G. Atkinson, wife of a Minneapolis business executive, who was sentenced to one year in a Polish jail for alleged violation of custom regulations regarding possession of foreign currency, was reported at Warsaw following pr& tests by representatives of the U. S. department of state. Forced to halt near the border because of tire trouble, Mrs. Atkinson was arrested when she crossed into Germany for aid and forgot to declare a letter of credit in her possession upon returning across the Polish border. /

408 Elm street. Sunday morning service, 10:45. Wednesday evening service, third Wednesday of the month. Readir.g room open Wednesday from 2 to 4 p. m. “Christ Jesus” is the subject of the Le on Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, August 30. The Golden Text is: “God sent not hi ; Son into the world to cono’emn the world; but that the world through him might be saved” (John 3: 17). Among the citations which compr, • tho Lesson - Sermon is the iwing from the Bible: “Now when Jo us was risen early the first day of the week, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom he had cast; even devils. Afterward he anocared unto the eleven as they sat at meat, and upbraided them with their unbelief and hardness of heart, because they believed not them which had seen him after he was riven. And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach th* gospel to every creature. And these sign; hall follow them that believe; In my name shall they east out devils; they shall sneak with new tongues; They shall take up serpent-; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16: 9, 14, 15, 17, 18). The Lesson-Sermon also includes the following passages from the Christian Science textbook, “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy: “Jesus established in the Christian era the precedent for all Christianity, theology, and healing. Christians are under as direct orders now, ns they were then, to be Christ-like, to possess the Christ-spirit, to follow the Christ-examnle, and to heal the sick as well as the sinning” (p. 138). “When will Jesus’ professed followers learn to emulate nim in all ways and to imitate his mighty works?” (p. 37). “If we wish to follow Christ, Truth, it must be in the way of God’s appointing” (p. 826). SPEED LIMIT DISPUTED JEWETT CITY, Conn.. (UP) — The city council and the Mate motor

Williams Radio Servic Sorvlce on any Mod'’ 1 TUBES TESTED FREE

138 W. Berry St.

phone “

Dry-Cleaning Pressing Hat-Blocking

Family WMli Curtain*, 9 Blankets, SI)

Home Laundry and Clean

Frank C. Schoenrn THE JEWELER Watch, Clock and JewekT Repairing Phone 422 E. Wsstii" PHONE 288 W. A. BEFMKK Plumbing & f'eatin WARM AIR FURNAC' Installed - Repaired GUTTERING AND ROOFI>' fl C. & B. Tin Shop Phone 103-Y 24 S. Jackson L&H. Chevrolet Sales l n( ' O. W. HOLLOWELL Phone 846 N. "SAY IT WITH FLOWERS' Phone Eitel Floral Co. Putnam County’* letdimr