The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 September 1936 — Page 2

(THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA' SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1930.

—For Sale—

FOR SALE OR ITENT: Six room house at Hanna t^ourt. Available about Sept. 15th. Inquire at 5 Hanna Court. 22-tf

FOR SALE-I', ton 1935 Chevrolet truck; x-xcellent condition; all new tires. Hess Tire & Battery Service. 3-3t FOR SALE: 30 head of Shropshire ewes and one registered buck and lour buck lambs. Also extra matched team of young grey Perchcron mares M. L. Nichols, 6 miles East on Stilesville road. 2-3-5-Sp

FOR SALE: Now wheat drill; one and two horse drills; used drills; two good used wagons, used tractor, also one rubber tired Fordson tractor. Walter S. Campbell. 2-3-5-31

FOR SALE 19.6 Tanle model Pliileo radio; used very little, $10. 209 East Seminary. 5-2t

Apples for Sale, 1-8 mile south of intersection roads 43 and 36 Roy Detro. 5-3p

Artists Supplies of all kinds. Come in and let us show you the many new items in our line, Snider’s Wall Paper and Paint Store. 3I-5-7-3t

FOR SALE - Practically now house and outbuildings, ten acres well fenced, part tillable, woeds and pasture land. Reasonable Inquire at Banner office. 4-2p

FOR SALE An extrn good 160acre farm. Improved. Box J. Banner. 4-2p

FOR SALE Forty acre farm in Marion township; good seven room house; barn and out-buildings good; water; priced very reasonable, Inquire at Banner office. 4-2p

FOR SALE: 10 Barred Rocks Roosters from blood tested hens. Mrs. Glenn Hodshire, Greencastle, R. R- 2. 5-lp. FOR SALE—One sow and eight good pigs. 855 North Jackson street. 5-lp

FOR SALE—Watermelons, three miles south of Manhattan. John Rightsell. 5-lp

FOR SALE One repossessed Hoover Cleaner, good as new; one second hand Hoover, A-l condition; one almost new Air-Way. complete. Phone 127. Link’s Store. 4-5-7-3p

SCHOOL SUPPLIES—Pens, pencils, tablets, erasers, ink, paste, water color sets, note book filler, and typewriter paper at Snider’s Wall Paper and Paint Store. 31-5-7-3t

FOR SALE: Five extra good 350 lb. Red Duroc sows to farrow the middle of September. See William Kocher, northwest corner square or Walter S. Campbell. 2-5-2t

FOR SALE: Three polled Hereford bulls. Bruce Lane Bainbrklge, Ind. 2-5-2t

FOR SALE: ’.33 Plymouth sedan; 3932 Studebaker coupe; ’31 Chevrolet coupe; ’28 Chevrolet sedan; a one ton Ford truck; one Chevrolet truck and a ’29 International, 2 ton truck. Walter S. Campbell. 2-5-21

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

FOR SALE -Nice six room modem cottage, close in. Ferd Lucas. 4-3t

FOR SALE OR RENT: Modern house at 409 Elm street. Phone 200X- 4-2t FOR SALE: Two It rsey rows; two Shorthorn cows; five Duroc sows to farrow Sept. 15 also 15 good ewes. Walter S. Campbell. 2-4-5-3t NOTICE: Will deliver and spread your lime on ground. See me for prices, "’alter S. Campbell. 2-6ts.

FOR RENT—Five room cottage semi-modern. 9 Olive. Mrs Cyrus O’Hair, Greencastle R. 3. 4-3p FOR RENT: New Ellis apartments 615 East Seminary street. Electric refrigeration and gas stoves. Phone 443. 31-6ts. FOR RENT- Three or five room modern apartment, newly decorated ind furnished. Phone 20?-X 2-3t FOR RENT—Lower modem apartnent at 721 East Seminary street, rleat and water fumi , '.hed. E. A. Browning. 6-tf —Wanted — WANTED: Competent and reliable tenant farmer with own equipment for 200-acre combination stock and grain farm, Putnam county. Good fences, buildings, woods pasture and spring water. Farm available now. Reply and give references to Box 29, care Banner. 29-5-2t WANTED TO BUY: Feeding shoals, weighing 75 to 130 lbs. Address George Harvey, Plainfield, Box 85. 31-6p —Lost— _ LOST: Female black and tan hound. Brown spots over each eye. Charles Wood. Maple Heights. 5-lp —Miscellaneous— Sunday dinner at Crawford’s. Fried chicken and Swiss steak. Dinners, 35c; lunches, 25c. It NOTICE: Call Louis Williams. Phone 510-Y, City garbage collector.

6-tf

Piano tuning and repairing. All work guaranteed. Leave orders at Glascock’s Music store. George E. Hazlett. 4-2p Bring your Kodak films that you exposed on your vacation trip to The Cammack Studio where they will receive careful attention by an expert. A snapshot album free with a full roll developed. 31-2-5-7-9-12-61 YOUTH’S DREAMS REALIZED AS HE EDITS MAGAZINE AUSTIN, Tex., (UP)—The childhood dreams of 21-year-old Joe Austell Small, Chreisman, Tex., to edit his own magazine have become a realiey. When Small was 12 years old he wrote a short outdoor article on theme paper in a childish scrawl and mailed it to a national sports magazine. It was accepted, and he was off on a writing career. Article followed article, and finally a venture into fiction was successful but the longing was there not to sell stories to other editors but to buy them from others in his capacity as editor of the magazine of his dreams. With the August issue of "The Southern Sportsman’’ Small, now a University of Texas sophomore became an editor. "If I could have put as much time on that first issue as I spent in dreaming about it,” Small said, "there wouldn’t have been any one subscriber who could carry it home with him.”

FOXY COYOTE STEALS FOOD FROM REARS YELLOWSTONE PARK, .. Wyo. (UP)—Rangers thought he was a coward, but they discovered that a coyote here was merely being clever. The coyote skirts over the bearfeeding grounds each evening, but carefully stays away from the feeding platform. Rangers, wondering why he came without attempting to eat, checked up. They found that one or two of the bears have a habit of picking out appetizing pieces of meat and scampering to the timber, where they will not be molested. The coyote followed them into the timber, took a quick nip at the bear’s heels and, when the bear drops the meat to defend himself, the coyote grabs it and dashes away.

BANNER ADS GET RESULTS

THE DAILY BANNER

And

Herald Consolidated! "It Waves For All" Entered In the postoffice at Green - castle, Indiana, aa second class mall matter under Act of March 8, 1878. 8-ibscrlptlon price, 10 cents per week; |3.00 per year by mall In Putnam County; $3.50 to $0.00 per year by mall outside Putnam County. PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS

Miss Mildred Rutledge has returned home after spending several weeks in Springfield, 111. Miss Martha Jane Dunlavy of Indianapolis is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Dunlavy. Kappa Delta Phi sorority will not meet Monday evening, Sept. 7. Announcement will be made later. Dorothy Jean Vancleave has returned home after spending several days with relatives in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Cleve Thomas left today for Curtis, Mich., where they will spend a week at Cedar Springs

resort.

Miss Marjorie McIntyre left today for Rushville, Ohio, where she will teach music and art in tne schools this winter. Fanners interested in seed or livestock loans should call at the office of the Putnam county agent, first floor, courthouse. Richard Baldwin has returned to his home in Toledo, Ohio, after spending the summer with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. James Merryweather, south Indiana s’reet. Mrs. Merryweathcr accompanied him

home.

Robert Stewart, evangelist at the Somerset Christian church, will have as his sermon subject Sunday morning, “Prayer, It’s Origin and Why It Is Not Answered Immediately Today.” The subject Sunday evening will be “Analogy Between Eve and the Church.” Miss Pearl M. Young will leave Sunday for LaPorte where she will again teach dramatics and public speaking in the senior high school. Miss Young has just completed a course in vocal music this summer under the instruction of Miss Carmen Siewert of the DePauw School of Music. There will be a meeting of Democratic precinct committeemen and committee women of Putram county, Tuesday, Sept. 8, at 1 p m. at the courthouse, for the purpose ot selecting a nominee for *he fall election to fill the office of Putnam county auditor made vacant by the death of William A. Cooper.

Don’t let your wife wash on Labor day. Try out thrifty service, 15 pounds for 98c. Everything washed, flat work ironed. Home Laundry & Cleaners. 5-lt

WOMAN WINS BEND1X RACE (Contlnucri From Pn*e One) port where the race finish marked the opening of the 1936 national air races. George Pomeroy, piloting a big Douglas DC2 transport plane, was fourth with 16 hours, 16 minutes and 24 seconds, collecting $1,000, while Amelia Earhart Putnam, transoceanic flyer, finished fifth—only other entry to finish the grueling cross-country race. Her purse was $500. In addition to the regular prize money the three women flyers also split a $2,500 purse, Joe Jacobs of Detroit, flying the piano of Gar Wood, motorboat racer, was forced to abandon his plane in mid-air when the motor exploded in Kansas.

TERRIER PROVES HE’S A PACIFIST AS GUNS ROAR

—For Rent—

FOR

RENT: Small

furnished

apartment, modem, 702

East Semin-

ary.

4-2t.

FOR

RENT Modern, four room

1 1 1 £

unfurnished.

7 South

Locust street.

4-2p

FOR RENT I have a few choice apartments for rent in a good residential part of the city. Phone Ferd Lucas 255 or 452 4-tf

diiiiimmimiiiiiiiiiimmiiiimiiiiiiiii’-. 1 The College Inn | 1 OPENING ' = Tuesday Noon, Sept. 8 E = E Phone 589 - ~~ M = Private Dining Rooms for Parties^

CLOSED LABOR DAY We will be closed Monday. Regular Monday pick-

ups will be made Tuesday.

Home lidiiiHlry & Cleaners

STONINGTON, Conn. <UP> — Queenie, handsome Irish terrier, belonging to the Cahart family, Fishers Island, is a pacifist. When the 241st Coast Artillery, Massachusetts National Guard began firing the big seacoast guns, Queenie’s ears went straight up. Then she dived into Long Island Sound. Nearly three miles from the island, passengers aboard Capt. Lewis Stanton's 28-foot cabin cruiser, hoard a scraping noise at the boat’s starboard. A hurried investigation revealed the nearly exhausted Queenie trying hard to get aboard. She was licted over the rail and wrapped in blankets. The next day she was taken back to the "war zone.”

CALIFORNIA AUTO TOLL UP SAN FRANCISCO, (UP) — California’s death toll from automobile accidents averaged seven a day for the first six months of the year. This is an increase of 9 per cent over the

same period last year

TREE SHELTER*' EXTENDED OVER NORTH DAKOTA FARGO, N. D. 'UP'—Farm treeplanting, a project which has resulted in the establishment of thousands of windbreaks in North Dakota in the past few years, will be expanded wherever possible, according to plans of Victor V. Freeman, in charge of the windbreaking program of the North Dakota Agricultural College extension service and the State Forestry School. Freeman, who succeeded D. D. Baldwin as head of the extension service forestry in July, declared that fanners have shown keen interest in improvement of their farms with trees in connection with the shelterbelt program, which is under local supervision of county agri-

cultural agents.

Under the tree-planting project a limited number of farms annually are provided with shelterbelt trees furnished at a nominal price by the state nursery. Certain management and and cultivation requirements are specified, thus insuring successful establishment of trees. Plantings then are used by the county agricultural agents to demonstrate the other interested farmers the best meth-

ods of tree culture.

In 1936 more than 400.000 trees were planted in such farm windbreaks, slightly more than 400 farmsteads being thus improved.

SMALL FARMERS GAIN BERKELEY, Cal. 'UP'—From a country of large estates, sometimes running into a million acres and investing the owm r with feudal powers, Mexico is rapidly becoming a country of small farm owners, according to Dr. Herbert I. Priestly, professor of Mexican history at the University of California. Dr. Priestly has returned from a detailed study in Mexico of the development of the land and farming movement there I "The subdivision of large estates started under Presidents Carranza and Obregon,” Priestly says, "but languished under the rule of subsequent presidents until Cardenas took the helm. Since then, subdivision, with corresponding grant of small farms to common farmers, has been extended into slates which were not touched by his predecessors and renewed in others, such as Colina. "Nor is the government making any attempt to pay for the land, having dropped the sham of giving indemnity in bonds. The common people are so taken with the idea of owning their own land that at the President's suggestion they have organized agrarian militia in many places to prevent the landed gentry from making any attempt to turn the

tables."

The result, according to Dr. Priestly, has been an increasing enmity on the part of the wealthy conservatives. This, he points out, puts President Cardenas in a difficult position, for despite his popularity with farmers and laborers, he is dependent on the support of the army, some of whose most influential generals are large land owners. "However," says Dr. Priestly, "the army, better educated and more honest than ever before, and possessed of a new professional spirit which marks a distinct break with the past, will remain loyal. Thus, by barring any widespread discontent, the Cardenas government should remain in the saddle until the expiration of its term in 1910.” BISHOP ENTHRONED AT BEAUTY SHOP SITE LONDON (UP) When Dr. Neville Lovett was enthroned Bishop of Salisbury he donned his robes in a beauty parlor. In doing this, he conformed to ancient tradition. In 1220, Bishop Poote, the first bishop of New Sarum assumed his vestments on this spot, the site of which is now occupied by a woman’s hairdressing shop. Business was suspended at the shop while Dr. Lovett donned his robes before the ceremony.

Sunday Noon

You can get FRIED CHICKEN BAKED CHICKEN OR

VEAL With Mushroom Sauce at the

LINCOLN Dining Room

.'.SOCIETY EHiDMiS

Swain and West Reunion Monday The Swain and West reunion will be held at the home of Mr and Mrs. Holmes Graver, on road 43, Monday. Friends and neighbors are welcome. + + 4 - 4'+ + + 'F Tri Kappa Sorority Holds Installation Tri Kappa sorority met Thursday evening with Mrs. C. B. Havens, j Northwood. Installation was held for the following new officers, president, Mrs. V. Earl Wiseman vicepresident, Mrs. W. J. Krider; secretary, Mrs. Rex Thorlton, and treasurer, Mrs. Donovan Moffrit. Plans were also started for the annual dance which will be held Oct. 3 at Bowman gymnasium. •9 -F -1- *9 New Era Club To M<‘ot Tuesday The New Era Club will meet on Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. David Lockwood, east of the city. Members please note change in place of meeting.

ORDINATION SERVICE SUNDAY Several out of town guests will be present at the ordination service of John R. Talbott, Sunday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock at the Christian church. The service will be conducted by Rev. Robert T. Beck, assisted by the board of elders of the church. W. R. Hutcheson, W. L. Denman, Vernon Snyder, Charles MeGaughey, John Boyd, Ira Cowling, J. W. Herod, Luther Easter, John A. Dietrich and

Paul Boston.

Kenneth Cook of Rockville will be at the organ and will play hymns during the reading of the service. Preceding the ordination Miss Garnett Sackett of Mooresville, violinist, will play “My Task.” Ushers will be Harold Edwards, Marshall Foster and Elwood Trout. Mr. Talbott will be ushered to the altar by Robert Daniel of Brazil and Fay Spurlock of Greencastle. In the receiving line with Mr. Talbott and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Talbott, will be Rev. Beck, Mrs. Paul Heaney and Lois Arnold. Following the ordination, the Women’s Missionary Society of the local church will give a reception to which the membership of the church and the guests and friends of Mr. Talbott are invited. Immediately following the reception Mr. Talbott will leave for Lexington, Ky., where he will assume the responsibility as director of religious education.

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Victor L. Raphael, minister Miss Sadie Moor, organist Church school, 9:30 Morning worship, 10.35. Music: ■ Prelude, “Recitative and Chorale,” | Guilmant; offertory, “The Legend of the Mountain.’ Karg-Flert. Sermon' theme. “An Employer’s Faith ’’ Church and Sunday school picnic, Wednesday, 6:30 p. m., at th“ home of the Eitels, Melrose avenue. Each one is asked to provide a dish of food, sandwiches for self, and table service. Choir practice Friday 7 p. m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Gust Emil Carlson, minister. Bible school, 9:30 a. m. Murel Davis superintendent. Morning worship, 10:30 a. m. Message: "The Way Into God’s Presence”. Lord’s Supper service will conclude the morning worship hour. The hand of fellowship will be extended to any person who wishes to be a member of this Church and serve with us. A very important item of business will be introduced at 11:30. Every member of the Church, who is at all able to be present, is urged to have a part in this matter. Unions— Primary, Junior, Intermediate, Senior, B. A. U.—6:30 p. m. Evening Gospel service, 7:30 p. m. Message: "Calvary's Armistice.” Please notice the change in time of the Sunday evening and mid-week prayer services. Mid-week prayer service Thursday evening, 7:00 p. m., in the Senior B. Y. P. U. room.

There is a hott Pr pay your debts than, in a scattered hit and way, it’s by combinil you owe in oneoblJj t hou pay it out bv^ ly payments. ‘ An Indiana Loan ena you to pay body at once. LOANS UP TO $300 1 Indiana Loan Co, 24i/j E. Wushlngtun J

DRIVING ERRORS INDEXED

AUSTIN, Tex., (UP) — First five months operation of the Texas drivers’ license law has resulted in suspension of driving rights of only 70 of the 1,500,000 persons issued cards on April 7. Cards were issued to all drivers without tests. The licenses are suspended for three violations of specified rules within a year. Suspensions or license revocations also follow negligent homicide while driving; conviction of an offense made a felony in the motor laws; driving while intoxicated; failure to stop and aid after an accident; two convictions of striking a person while driving. Two hundred drivers have had a third of the license turned into the state safety department under the provision that three minor traffic law violations cause suspension. To facilitate the record of such offenses, the licenses were issued in three sections, with perforations betwen them. A convicting judge or justice of the peace tears off one section and sends it to the safety department. When the three have been sent in, the driver has no license. One justice of the neace made quick work of the case of one offender. He convicted the driver cn each of three separate counts, tore off a section of his license for each, mailing all at once to the state office. The sectional licenses have caused confusion in other states Texas motorists on tour have had part of the Texas license torn off and sent back to Austin for traffic \iolations in other states. One Arizona justice of the peace was obviously active. He has mailed thre first offense tickets within a month. In Omaha, one justice revoked a Texan’s license. He wrote “revoked” across the face of the ftcense and mailed it to Austin. Most of the 70 suspensions have been caused by intoxication. There are less revocations for “assault” and a few for negligent homicide. First suspensions are for six months. If the driver is caught driving during the suspension period, the time automatically extended for a year. Licenses issued last April will be god for three years, unless revoked or suspended.

few

THE CHURCH

OF THE NAZARENE Rev. E. F. Singhurse minister. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:45. Texts for the Day: “And they said seven and a little fishes,” Matt. 15:34 36. "And He took the seven loaves and the fishes and gave thanks”. "I am set for a defense of the gos-

pel.” Phil. 1:17.

N. Y. P. S. 6:45 p. m. Evangelistic service 7:30 p. m. Prayer meeting Thursday at 7:30

p. m.

GORIN MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH Claude M. McClure, minister. Carmen Siewert, acting minister of music. ,, Edward R. Bartlett, church school superintendent. 9:30 a. m. Sunday church school. 10:40 Morning worship The holy communion. In the administration of holy communion the new form will he used. Music will be under the direction of Miss Siewert. 6 p. m. High school Epworth league. Subject, “Follow the Noblest Personality,” as outlined in Kerby Page’s book, “Living Creatively.” Leader, Margaret Erdman. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH 408 Elm street. Sunday morning sendee, 10:45. Wednesday evening strvice, third Wednesday of the month. Reading room open Wednesday from 2 to 4 p. m. “Man” is the subject of the Lesson - Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, September 6. The Golden Text is: “Mark tho perfect man, and behold the upright: for the end of that man is peace” (Psalms 37: 37). Among the citations which comprise the Lesson - Sermon is the following from the Bible: “This I ' say therefore, and testify in the Lord, that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles walk, in the vanity of their mind, Having the understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart: And be renewed in the spirit of your mind; And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness” (Ephesians 4: 17,18,23,24). 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: “So far as tho scientific statement as to man is understood, it can be proved and will bring to light the true reflection of God — the real

«i> mu uciusiuu Limi* Liivrv IS I than one Mind, more than one God, laan in God’s likeness will appear, and this eternal man will include in that likeness no material element. As a material, theoretical life-basis is found to be a misapprehension of existence, the spiritual and divine Principle of man dawns upon human thought, and leads it to ‘where the young child was,’—even to the birth of a new-old idea, to the spiritual sense of being and of what Life includes” (p. 191).

in the children’s chapel. Tin,,, has been newly decorated in, ness for the fall session ners and primary will meet \ children’s room. 9:30 a. m. Discussion Men’s Forum will meet in ivj section of the social | Bible class will meet in tn ( | section of the social mtirs. groups will be notified. 10 a. m. Morning worsh’.i J <wnet’>u:y. Berman, «Hiw Faced Recovery" Speaker, Beck. Solois*, Mr Jarratt 11:15 a. m. Youth Forum is a forum hour foi the nigh i young people. 9:30 Ordination services. Jo Talbott will be ordained to the tion ministry of religious edi by the minister and elden church. 6:30 p. m. Christian Fmlea ROOK OF I’KAYEK 1 SKI) BY GKKKI.tA \T SMITHSOil WASHINGTON. UP) _ jJ Episcopal prayer-book, used day by the lutr Gen Adolphus j ley during his Arctic expenJ forms a part of a collection i personal effects recently place! exhibition by the Smithsonian I tution through the i curtesy of| heirs. The battered old Book of Coal Prayer falls open naturally «t| is picked up. to a selection fmi^ 45th, 89th and 110th Psaims. Day after day, more than a I century ago it was opened tol page by the commander of a | body of American soldiers in I the most desperate circumstand the story of polar exploration, reading of passages from thia by Greeley hel|x'd to keep un courage of his starving folia while their numb r dropp'-'i fre^ to 7. Among other relics of the 1 expedition which a re contained iJ collection are: The spectacle J gloves worn by Greeley at the I Franklin Bay ramp; a spri^ Arctic grass ho collected, as as of Grinnell Land flora: the flafl flew over the camp at Lady Fra^ Bay and tattered fragments ( flag flown over the farthest-! camp establishmed by the expedl INDIAN BRIDE KISSlNfi Tti

LOGAN. Utah. (UP)-"'hen! ell J. Crookston. county clerk, to kiss the Indian bride of Eli Diggie, 38, Fort Hill resentf brave, Diggie told him, ‘•That .si our custom and we do not kissj bridek in public. It i* mnrc to us.” Crookston did not arfpMl

Dry-Cleaning Famliy | Pressing Curtain*, Hat-Blocking Blanket*, ^ Home Laundry and Cleanel

BANNER WANT AUS PAY

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Robert Talmadge Beck minister. Mrs. E. R, Bartley, director of church school. Howard Jarratt, director of music. 9:30 a. m. Graded church. The junior church will Aicet in the upper loom chapel. TViis will start the fall session for the juniov chinch and attendance will count from this Sunday on. The primary church will maet

Frank C. Schoennu THE JEWEL!® Watch. Clock and Repairing Phone 412 & W»*h^ PHONE W. A. BEEMER Plumbing WARM AIR FURNACE Installed - GUTTERING AND BOOFD 0. & B. Tin shop Phone 16S-Y 24 8 ,a ^—. L. &H. Chevrolet Sales to®’ O. W. HOLLOWELL Phone 348 “SAT IT WITH FLOWED Phone $28 Eitel Floral Co. Putnam Oouaty’a

j