The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 November 1936 — Page 2
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA T'lTTRSDA Y. NOA’EAIBER 19, 19.%.
ALL DAY MEETING
Tliere will l'" :..i all clay meeting at the Putnamvil! • ~ r E. Church. Sunday, November 22. Sunday School will be held at 9:30 o’clock followed by church service and a program. There will be a basket dinner at Community hall at 12:30 o’clock. Rev. Claude McClure, pastor of the Gobin Memorial Methodist Church, will be in charge of the afternoon service beginning at 2 o’clock. The public is cordially invited to attend.
Mothers !
drcn’s cc
V?CKS W VapoRub
In treating children’s colds,
don’t take chances..use
ifftOVED BY 2 GENERATIONS
nr;U K chapel m. e. church
Services for Sunday morning, Nov. 22 will be held at the usual hours, with church school at 10 o’clock and morning worship at 11. There will, be special music for the worship service.
iv-"
$3.00 In Cash
Will Ire paid the person sugftfestiiitf a winning new name for the Alley Inn Open Friday under new management. T<> <|ii;ilify for the reward, persons must make a pimdiasei of five cents of more. Wo servo Sunday Dinners — Plafo Lundies— Short Orders and Fountain Service. WINNING NAME WILL BE ANNOUNCED DECEMBER 1 MRS. ( LARA HARNEY
rtranc A&P FRUITS AND VEGETABLES ARE LOW
PRICE
and Quality is Never Stinted!! ICEBERG
LETTUCE
Solid Crisp
Head
5c
Cranberries,^*';, Ceiery
21c Potatoes sw"?. 4 u>.. 17c staik 5c Apples R To«d" u,y 4 Lb *- 25c
Texas
Seedless
Large
Juicy Fruit
GRAPEFRUIT
^ FLCRIDA QRANGES PANCAKE FLOUR
SOUPS
TOMATO CATSUP SALAD DRESSING OUAKER OATS
TOBACCO LEWIS LYE
4 For 19c Doz - 25c
Aunt
Jemima’s Tall Boy
Vegetable of Tomato
Iona
, Lge. Pkg. 17c
Prince Albert, Velvet And Half and Half
3 3
Pkg. Tall Cans Lge. Hots. Qt.
10c 25c 25c 2 5 c
Con Carn« Armour’*
2-Lb. Dkg.
Iona Puree
Chili
Swansdown Choc. Crops
Dates
Citron, Lemon
r and Orange TWIST BREAD
V/ISG9KSIII CHEESE
ESKAR COFFEE
WhIU Hou.c
Can 5c Can 9c
25c
b. 10c
25c Rajah Currants
rk*. 10c Crisco
Milk
Storage Eggs Clapp’s
Figs
Baby Foods
A&P White Sliced
Rich and
Full Bodied
IS. 8c ti» 10c Cans 25C
•rail y c Can 1 ^ d°i. 33c
3 Cana 25C Vk 0 ; 10c
fk*. 12c
21c 9c
/Lb 25c
23c
Lb. Can
24-Oz.
Loaf
Lb. Tin
IN OUR MEAT. MARKETS
FRESH PICNIC FORK ROAST SMOKED PICNICS s c BEEF CHUCK ROAST
OYSTERS
DRESSED HADDOCK SWISS STEAK
BACON
15c
Fresh Solid Pack
Fresh Frozen
From Branded
Rounds
Sugar Cured Whole or Half
Lb.
V P FOOD STORE
THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated “It Waves For All’’ Entered In the postoffice at Greencastle. Indiana, ns second class mail matter under Act of March 8, 1878. Subscription price, 10 cents per week; $3.00 per year by mail in Putnam County; $3.50 to $5.00 per year by mail outside Putnam County.
PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS
COME AND GET IT’ A real Fried chicken supper for 25 cents at Farm Women’s Market, northwest corner square, Saturday evening, Nov. 21—
FKOM 5 TO 8 O'CLOCK
Also soups, pies and cakes. We an* faking this moans 1<> acquaint the public v i; !i i he qualify of our products. Wo invite you.
Mrs. Rebecca Secrest of Cloverdale left the county hospital Thursday. Mrs. Wilmer Albin, south Jackson street, underwent an operation at the county hospital, Thursday morning. Mrs. Elmer Blue, east Washington street, underwent an operation at the county hospital, Thursday morning. Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Wright and daughter spent Wednesday in Clayton with Mr. and Mrs. Stacy Lambert. Myron Luthholtz of Knightstown returned home Wednesday after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Harris, east Hanna street. William A. Kreigh who has been ill at his home on south Indiana rtreet for the past two weeks, is reported much improved and is able to be up and around the house. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Allen, Jr., were in Bloomington Thursday for the funeral of Mrs. Amos W. Taylor, mother of Dr. C. Howard Taylor, former pastor of the Gobin Memorial church in Greencastle. Mrs. Taylor made her home with her son since the death of her husband two years ago. She had been ill for some time and passed away Wednesday morning. Burial was made in the cemetery at Homeland, Ohio, where the family lived until the death of Mr. Taylor. She will be remembered by quite a number of friends in Greencastle who came to know her while she visited with her son and family in Greencastle.
NEW STORE HOURS 7:30 a. m. to 6 p. m. Every Day Excepting Saturday 7:30 a. ni. to 9 p. m. Kroger’s A.&P. Tea Co. Oakley’s
AMERICAN PRESERVES IN .MINIATURE PARISAN ARTS
A good home manager manages to send her washing out of the home. We are prepared to take care of it. Home Laundry and Cleaners. 19-lt
V. Elaine Thomas, chiropractor, has installed a late, safe, mineral vapor bath cabinet. She invites you to come or inquire about it. 19-Ip
TRI KAPPA rummage sale, CourtHouse, Saturday morning at 8:30 o’clock. 19-2t
CAP aNd ball colt REVOLVER HIGHLY PRIZED
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz., (UP)—Ollie Tinnin, who makes his living trimming hair and selling sporting goods, and who also has a fetish for collecting old types of arms and ammunition, has a cap-and-ball model of a .36 caliber Colt revolver, used in stage holdups during the hazardous days or Arizona. Until recently, he had no idea of its value. He explained to curious visitors he had “just picked it up in trade somewhere.’’ One day a representative of a national arms firm called on Tinnin to check his gun supply for the hunting season. He noticed the old weapon and jotted down its patent number and several outstanding features. He checked the revolver’s history. He learned the gun was one of the early “stage-robbery” models, made by Joseph Colt himself. Its type is unknown outside of museums. Tinnin refused to sell it, although offered a large sum. Nobody sees the weapon now except Ollie's closest friends. He has it locked in a safety vault.
^(^vnAxul PROGRESS! THE NEW steel wage scale, President Roosevelt believes, is a step toward stabilizing wages with relation to living costs. Apparently “big business” and the President are seeing eye to eye these days! YOU’LL SEE EYE to eye with us about eyeMght attention oner you have had OURS. We’ll give your eyes Die advantage of MODERN rare . . . skillful examination and careful fitting of the CORRECT glasses. Have this attention Immediately. Know REAL visual eomfort and effieieney! cji.ncr. 201 E. WASHINGTON PHONE 2-40.
PARIS, (UP)—While engineers of Paris, pointing to the American example of hygiene and high living standards, are busily razing the unhealthy sections of the city, an American, George D. Alexander, is working feverishly to preserve in miniature what the Parisians are destroying. He started five years ago to make a replica of Old Paris, just to amuse himself. He began constructing exact models of the oldest streets of the city, with houses some two feet high, and nothing left out—scaling walls, shoring, propping up tottering buildings, chalkmarks on the walls, discolorations, street signs, — even hanging in a shoemaker’s shop a sign “Closed on account of death,” and in a newspaper kiosk all the leading journals, postage stamp size. In his pursuit of old Paris Alexander sometimes has to work quickly to get his reproduction made before the condemned buildings are razed. Not all of the blocks vowed to destruction are picturesque, but naturally the unhealthiest quarters, those given over to the wreckers’ tools, are the medieval remnants of old Paris. Many lovers of that aspect of the city, of which few traces now remain, were sorry to see the old Rue de Venise disappear, dirty r.nd dangerous at it was. They look forward with dismay now to the approaching destruction of the tortuous winding streets of the quarter around the church of Saint-Severin—although with the saving thought that the opening of that section may reveal one of the most beautiful churches in Paris, now hardly known because it is tucked away (only a block from the Boulevard St. Michel) In the maze of narrow and filthy streets. < When all of medieval Paris has been torn down, Alexander’s work will become a museum piece of unique value. He has built it with the greatest care. His method is first to go to the locality he wishes to reproduce, where he sketches the buildings, notes the dimensions, colors and all details, using plaster on a skeleton of wood and canvas. He makes roof tiles of matchboxes, and carves paving stones to the shape which ages have worn them with a pocketknifc. Nothing is missing. That characteristic of the Paris streets, the Vespasian, appears in its oldest and least tempting form. On it are pasted advertisements for drinks and medicines. Nearby is the “Flower Basket”—an institution of a type most tourists visit at lease once while in Paris, complete with its brightly painted front, reel curtains, stained glass door and brilliantly illuminated street number. A scaffolding clambers drunkenly up the front of one building. Two tables and four chairs grace the sidewalk in front of a definitely fifthclass bar. Its awning its patched. Next door an antique store which approaches more nearly the statue of a junk shop spills a miscellaneous collection of useless and ugly objects from its display stands outside the door. Steps follow a rise in the street. A wall, bearing the sign “Post No Bills,” is covered with tattered posters. Everything is an exact reproduction of the original on a reduced scale. "I wouldn’t start the job again,” Alexander says, “not so much because it turned out to be so much more work than I imagined when I started it, brit because I think now I have reproduced all the essential characteristics of old Parisian houses.”
MANY NEVER SUSPECT CAUSE OF BACKACHES This Old Treatment OfUn
Brings Happy Relief
Many sufferers relieve nagging backache quickly, once they discover that the real cauae of their trouble may be tired kidneys. The kidneys are Nature's chief way of taking
i out
eya ar
the excess acids and waste «
Most people pass about 3 pints a day or about
3 pounds of waste.
Frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning shows there may be something wrong with your kidneys or bladder. An exccaa of acids or poisons in your blood, when due to functional kidney disorders, may be the cause of nagging backache, rheumatic pains, lumbago, leg pains, loss of pep and energy, getting un nights, swelling, puffinesa under the eyes, headaches and dizziness. Don’t wait! Ask your druggist for Doan’s Fills, used successfully by millions for over 40 years They give happy relief and will help the 15 milee of kidney tubes flush out poisonous waste from your blood. Get Doan’a Fills.
When It Comes To A Showdown And you realize that It’s money you need, you can save yourself u lot of unnecessary worry and expense hy coming to the Indiana l»an Company. LOANS UP TO $300 Indiana Loan Co. 24 Zi E. Washington Phone 15
Im
Mrs. M. I). Abrams To Be Honor Guest at Tea Mrs. Ward Mayhall will entertain guests at a tea Friday afternoon from 3 to 5 o’clock at her home on east Anderson street in honor of Mrs. Marshall D. Abrams. The tea is being held in connection with a banquet which will honor Mr. Abrams, local attorney who will soon take office as Kiwanis governor of the Indiana district. Wives of local Kiwanians will bo guests. Mrs. Mayhall will be assisted in the dining room by Mrs. Lynn Brown, Mrs. Paul Blake, Mrs. John Poor and Mrs. Warren Middleton. Mrs. Roy Abrams and Mrs. H. E. H. Greenleaf will pour, and Mrs. Kenneth West, Mrs. Russell Vermillion and Mrs. Russell Alexander will act as hostesses. Out of town guests will include Mrs. Stanley Porter, Franklin; Mrs. John T. Kester, Noblesville; Mrs. Connor Salm, Madison; Mrs. Kolb, Anderson; Mrs. George Byers, Lafayette; Mrs. Paul Butz, Lafayette; Mrs. Frank S. Southworth, Plymouth Mrs. Kreighbaum, Rochester, and Mrs. M. J. Huggins of Anderson. *|« »J« •J* Washburn Chapter Receives Invitation Washburn Chapter of D. A. R. has received an invitation from the Dorothy Q chapter, D. A. R„ of Crawfordsville, to attend a guest day meeting to be held Saturday afternoon, Nov. 21, in their chapter hall beginning at 2 o’clock. Anyone wishing to attend is asked to call the regent. *1* •!- d* 4* “F Section Four Met Wednesday Section Four of the First Christian church met Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Elmer Gibson, with Mrs. Tom Sweet and Mrs. Cora Mason as assisting hostesses. Devotions were led by Mrs. Mason, reading the 100th psalm, followed by the Lord’s Prayer. Mrs. Sweet read a paper on “Modern Thanksgiving.” Fifteen members and one guest, Mrs. William Alice, were present. Mrs. Mason Hostess To Home Economics Club The Friendship Home Economics club met Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Ethel Mason with eight members and one guest, Mrs. Roy Christy, present. Contests were won by Mrs. Ernestine Wells. The Christmas meeting will be held Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 16, at the home of Mrs. Lucille Jones. Members bring gifts for grab bag. Please note change in date of meeting. 4**F4 , *4 - *1*4' + Woman's Bible Club To Meet Tomorrow The Woman’s Bible Club, of the Gobin Memorial church, will meet i with Mrs. A. H. Manual, 433 An- ! derson street. Friday afternoon at 2 o’clock. Members please note j change in meeting place. 4* 4- + + + + + Co-Workers Will Meet Friday Co-Workers of the Baptist church
will meet Friday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock with Mrs. Howard Harris, south College Avenue. REBELS BOMB CITY
(Continued From Page One) burning. There were two more deep bomb holes in the street near the building. A third bomb destroyed a house, killing three and wounding 10 of its occupants, nearby. Many automobiles were burned in the streets by calcium-sodium incendiary bombs. The upper floors of the Telephone building were evacuated after the first bomb explosion in the immediate vicinity—one that shook the whole building and broke hundreds of windows. The girl operators continued their work during the raid. This morning’s raid was conducted by five bombers. Militiamen were kept busy gathering wounded from the streets, many of them the homeless women and children who sheltered in doorways, with only blankets left of their household possessions, after thier homes had been ruined. Their spirit has not broken. The city has been under continuous bombardment since Sunday morning. There was no sign that the city had anything but destestation of the men who ordered and carried out the bombing of their country’s capital. The war from the air had been frightful but on the land the loyalist army held fast today. The people’s army holds control of the Manzanares river and the four principal bridges crossing it into the city. On the road directly south to Aranjuez road, the nationalists hold the suburban village of Usera and threatened the bridgehead there. But the road is on the nationalist side, three blocks south of the river. The Segovia bridge, which spans the Manzanares at the end of the load running southwestward to Talavera, is likewise in loyalist hands.
PUN NOW
CRACKERS, Fresh mid Crispy, 2 lb. box
BARK REMOVED
SYDNEY, N. S. W., (UP)—A “debarking” operation has been per- jg] formed on several dogs here follow- j| ing noise protests from a Sydney hospital. Owners did not wish to [d |l>5e their dogs, so they had them
Of orated upon. .
^faja/s/ajsiaEiaiajaiajajaia'a'Sj'EraiaHafajQ's] NOTICE I I now have Dr. M. W. 1 Jessup’s Mineral Vapor Bath, ready for use. Mineral baths assist nature in relieving many chronic maladies, such as, Influenza, Colds, Asthma, Congestion, Brights Disease, Diabetes, Catarrh, Inflamation, Insomnia, Nervousness, Neuritis, Arthritis, Rhoumat ism
and Pimples.
ii
V. Elaine Thomas Chiropractor 110 Taylor Place Phone 687-X
j'wiaMaaspjsMSffijBMsia/asMcijaiaaja/gja
Polar Bear, Flour (Good for Cake*) 24 lb. Crisco 3 Lb. Can Choice Navy Be-.'. s New Crop, 3 Lb. Dauntless Egg Noodle* 8 oz. Pkg Mixed Vegetables No. 2 Can, 2 for Mince Meat Large Jar Nut Meats Pkg. Candied Fruits (For Cakes) ....
DAUNTLESS DESSERT < quick Sel) 2 boxes .... Sliced PINEAPPLE t No. 2 Can, 2 for t
Fruits and Vegetables Texas Grapefruit "I (Seedless) I^trge, 4 for .... AOC Cranberries Lb ZIJC Cal. Oranges Y _ Dozen 19C I Bananas solid ■% p* ,3 Lbs 1 / C Fancy Grimes Golden (J»-| £*fi Apples, Bu Pound 25C Potatoes, Fancy home QfT i grown, Pk. Ot)C 100 Lb. {\f* •Lig tpZ.ZD brunt Cabbage, While d»-| ope it lasts, 100 Lb. \ VA»O0 "• 23c: Sweet Potatoes -| q (Jerseys) 4 Lbs. AoC MEATS Oysters, Extra Standards nn i’h.t Z/C Oysters, Solid Pack g\o - ibi.yo Pork Cottage Butts nn Fresh, Lh. ZoC Po^k Loin Roast <>/» Lh. ..... ZOC Plate Boiling Beef -f n Lb. AJC Smoked Ham ope 2 Slices ZDC Jewel Bacon rim Lb. .. ITVC Ellis Grocery Co. Phone 53 Free Delivery
HERE’S THE 0/0 (ZAtt 0 W NOTONlj F/’“T-STARTINj sarmm
TYDOL GASOLINE
ON SAI at the Tyj pumps no\J a gasoline for zero weatl that’s close to sensatiod
i STARTS as quick ad jack-in-the-box and jh] your motor Winter tection besides.
This Big Gallon of Tyj contains a special to cylinder oil that kq valves and pistons SLICKED Ul for instant action.
—AN Da special cleata agent that prevents rj and corrosion. I his Tyl Big Gallon is an awful for your money. DICKSOI OIL COMPAQ V.W. Shirley South Jackson Street R 08 ® j Wilbur Chadd North Jackson Sir'*' 4 Delmas Brookshire Indianapolis Road 'RTPLEACTIOi
CASOLI
