The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 June 1937 — Page 2

This is th«. snil that England cheered! v % **1.. '* "Wg i

k

Tin* nnl> American wash suit in history to capture British tastes is the new i A! M BEACH Iteffent A h autitally balanced model built on modified drape lines that add hei du, subtract jprth and save your dollars — at

tile Workers Organization Committee, a C. I. O. affiliate, announced ftoday a settlement of a strike of 1.000 employes of the Morgan Packing Company. The strike started May 18. Jeffrey said the firm agreed to recognize the Committee on Industrial Organization as the bargaining agency and granted a general Increase of 10 per cent in wages. The announcement followed a conference between Ivan C. Morgan. | president of the company and Republican chairman, and a strikers' j committee. ! The employes held a mass meet- ! ing and greeted the news with en- ! thusiaani. Fires were started under : the plant boilers and Morgan indi- : cated work would begin tomorrow

morning.

Jeffrey issued a forma! statement, i laying, "I appreciate the fine spirit exhibited by the (Morgan Parking Company in all of our negotiations \ and feel that our relations in the ■ future under the agreement are go- | ing to be of genuine benefit to both ' the irm fand its employes” Morgan said he was “well pleased’’ with the outcome.

THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated “It Wave* For AH’* Entered In the postoffloe at Oreeoeastle, 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 $6.00 per year by mall outside Putnam County.

PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS

$16.75

.■ D » ? - J»_P ° ° J* m Jituich )>!/

Your favorite color . . white, gray, tan, blue or brown, is hete in your size. Why not come in and seo it ? CANNON’S

MOIU.W PACKING COMPANY NTKIKK ll\s BKKN SETTLED Al IN, In a June 8« — P)— Nc.'iiu'.n Jeffrey of Indianapolis, national ropresentatives of the Tex-

LINDBERGH CONTKIBCTEs TO ( RIME CONTROL FI ND NEW YORK*-(UP' The citizens Committee on the control o; crime in New York received a contiibution of $250 from Col. Charles A. Lindberg today. In a letter to Harry F, Guggenheim, president of the committee, Lindbergh said he was "greatly interested” in Qpmbating racketeering and would tie willing to make a further contribution. "I believe tiiat the present conditions of crime and corruption in New York City” he said, "constitute one of America’s most fundamental problems, and one which must be solved before we can claim to have developed a satisfactory system of gov-

ernment”

The letter was sent from Lindbergh's Long Bam, Weald, Sevenoaks, England. BIG W ALM T BAPTIST ( HCKCH Business meeting, Saturday, June 12. 8:00 p. m. June 13, Sunday school, 10:00 a. m. L. E. Baumunk, supt. Morning worship, 11:00 a. m. Rev, J. M. Cauldwell. pastor. Children’s Day program, 7:45 p. m. CIRCUIT COURT NOTES Audrid Fleenor vs. Fred Tincher, et al, dismissed.

>5

Mr. and Mrs. Dave FAiIton Crouch of Philadelphia are visiting with Mrs. Frances Cheek and Miss Martha Crouch. Mrs. Eva Rambo received word Tuesday announcing the death of her brother, Frank G. Nelson at Stony City, Iowa. Postmaster Albert Dobbs has returned home from Indianapolis where he attended the state convention of postmasters. Miss Laura Towne is at home rapidly recovering from a recent operation performed at the Methodist hospital in Indianapolis. The picnic meeting of the Presbyterian churcn which was to be held tins eve.mng at the Eitel home, has been postponed indefinitely. The Children’s Day program of Clinton Falls M. P. church will be given June 13th beginning at 7:30 o’clock. Everybody is cordially invited to attend. There will be an organization meeting of those persons interested in the Consumers Group of A. A. U. W. Thursday evening, at 7:30 o’clock, in Room 106 Asbury Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Goodpasture of Jefferson township are the parents of a 9 pound son, Wendell Wayne, born May 31st. Mrs. Goodpasture was formerly Miss Lillian Maxwell. Arthur Hays of Boise, Idaho, is here visiting Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Graham. Mr. Hays a graduate of DePauw and a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity will attend the DePauw Centennial. Miss Mary Kocher has returned to the home of her parents, Mr. and Mn. W. F. Kocher, W. Washington street. Miss Kocher received the M. A degree from the State University of Iowa at the commencement exercises last Monday. Donald Tharp, a youth living near this city, received a suspended sentence of 120 days on the state farm, and a fine of $1 and costs in the city court at Terre Haute,Tuesday, on a petit larceny chaige, according to the Terre Haute Star. The supension of the sentence was based upon the boy’spromise to return to home. His home is southeast of this

city.

z ifr x i 1 * // f OH& CMC* ATTENTION-COMPELLING COLOR DE*I0N \ ■ Inbred in the new GMC’s — “fcui/f in” as an integral part —are the new, entirely original “Dual-1 one” effects which blend cab, cowl, hood and radiator into one harmonious color design. This feature, exclusive with CMC, originated on CMC drafting boards, was fashioned for CMC modish shapes and contours and therefore cannot be imitated! Smartly styled though GMC’s are, their inherent stability and record-low upkeep are for truck operating records to tell. GMC urges you to ask GMC owners for facts. Greater advertising value plus greater economy, and low GMC prices, will assure GMC as your next truck. QUALITY AT PRICES LOWER THAN AVERAGE Tim, ooym,nt$ through ou- own V M A C P|on ot iowes! available -ole. GENERAL MOTORS TRUCKS (-TRAILERS

WALTER S. CAMPBELL ♦ Corner Vine and Franklin Streets GREENCASTLE, INDIANA •

School Janitors To Hold Meeting

Society News

Section Three To Meet June 17th

The meeting of Section Three of | the First Christian Church has been A two postponed until June 17th.

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LAFAYETTE. Ind.. June 9

day conference and short course on School Building and Ground Manage- j Theta Tan ment for custodians anti caretakers -j-,, M, N -t Thursday of Indiana schools will be held at Delta Theta Tau will meet ThursPurdue University, June 15 and 16, it ,| a y evening, June 10th at 7:30 at the was announced today by Professor j home of Mrs. Wallace Blue. Formal W. A. Knapp, Assistant Dean of j pledging will be held. The June party

Engineering at the University. The i conference will be under the auspices . of the engineering extension department and the department of educa-

tion.

group will act as hostesses. •F-5* + + *F4' + , F Putnam Young People Married At Lafayette Dorris H. Ruark and Miss

Mary

Such topics as "What Every Cus- Max j ne Jackson drove to Lafayette

OPEN SEASON FOR FISHING Next Wednesday. June 16. is the day for whose dawning local anglers have been waiting, with more or less impatience. It will be the opening of the fishing season, for all bass, for bluegill, crappie, goggle-eyes, red eared sunfish, yellow ring perch, pike-perch, and pike. These species in local waters may be caught, as far as the law is concerned, until the end of next April. Not more than six of the bass may be caught, of the length of 10 inches or more; 25 bluegill, crappie, goggleeye, and yellow ring perch, may be caught, of 5 or more inches length. The frog catching season is the same as for bass. HIGH COURT RULES INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., June 9.(UP)—The State Supreme court ruled today in the case of Mrs. Mary Gill, former Michigan City school teacher, that school boards cannot discriminate in salary schedules against women teachers who are married.

TRUNKS If you have a trunk to be sent to any point, north, south, east or west, you can do no better than to call United Merchants Truck We will call for it, take it from any floor and ship It properly. Phone 144

todian Should Know about Electric ity,” "The Janitors Responsibility in First Aid and Safety’’, and "Heating and Ventilating Buildings’ will be among the topics to be discussed. The conference also will take up the general care of buildings, including furnaces, boilers, fuel, supplies and numerous other lines of work that school custodians are called upon to

handle.

Speakers on the program will include H. F. Brinkley, Superintendent of Building and Grounds, Muncie; W. T. Miller, associate professor, heating and ventilating; J. D. Hoffman, professor of practical mechanics; A. Swope, associate professor, trade and industry; Franx Hockema, assistant to the president: R. B. Hull, associate in horticulture: and Professor Knapp, all of Purdue. This is the seventh conference of this character held in Indiana and the fifth on the Purdue Campus. The attendance usually ranges from 150 to 250. Registration is free. CONSERVATION CLUBS DOWN 194,781 ( ROWS IN CONTEST Indiana conservation clubs participating in the crow control contests sponsored by the Department of Conservation, have accounted for nearly two hundred thousand of these predatory birds, Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner, reported today. In the four annual contests, participating clubs have taken 194,781 crows. The 1937 contest, ending last week, resulted in the feet from 53,630 crows being turned in by the participating clubs. The Patoka Valley Fish and Game Club of Winslow took first place by turning in 17,626 crow feet during the five months. The Chain-O-Lakes Gun Club, South Bend, was second with 13.622 feet, and the Randolph County Fish and Game Association took third place with 10,669 feet. The first contest was staged in 1934 with the feet from 63,003 crows turned in by contesting clubs. In 1935 the clubs turned in feet from 53.888 crows, and in 1936 only 24.260 crows were taken by the clubs. Through the sponsorship of the control contests, conservation officials have sought to limit the damage done by crows to other more desirable species of birds and wildlife. Through raids on nests and the de-sti-uetion of eggs, the crows destroy many song and game girds each year, possessing no redeeming characteristics of their own. PAINTER KILLED IN FALL CLINTON, Ind., June 9—fUPi—Charles Patterson, 50, painter, w.ls killed instantly today when he fell headlong to a floor five feet below a scaffold on which he was working. It was believed he had lost hi; balance while reaching for a brush i was the victim of a heart attack. STEEL MILL OPENS Cleveland, Juno 9. -rtTPi Mayor A. Knaggs of Monroe, Mich., said today he had been informed that the C. I. O. planned to send outside supporters into Monroe to aid steel Unionist in the biggest test of their seven-state strike, the projected reopening tomorrow of a Republic Steel Corp., subsidiary mill. City officials at Monroe swore in a large force of special police, “preferably men with military experience,’’ to enforce the mayor's determination to protect men who desire to return to work at the scheduled reopening at 8 A. M. tomorrow'. Nearly two-thirds of the employes had voted to return. The plant is that of the Newton Steel Co., which makes steel primarily for the Detroit Automobile Industry.

WPA WILL MOVE TOWN

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., June 9— ' (UP)—John K. Jennings, state WPA director, today approved a $150,000 l rehabilitation project for flood-rav-aged Leavenworth, Ind., on the Ohio River.

WASHINGTON, D. C, June 9.— The Disaster Loan Corporation agreed today to loan $25,000 to the Tofon of Leanvenworth. Ind., to help pay the cost of rehabilitating the village which was almost demolished by the Ohio River flood last January. The WPA previously had agreed to give $130,000 to move the town to nearby hill.

MAKES 10 A/0 P CLASSES! \\ AT GROCERS |

Tuesday, and were married in that city at 2:30 o^lock that afternoon. From Lafayette, they expected to drive to Mansfield, Ohio, where the bridegroom was to make arrangements for taking over his new work, as an electrical engineer, on the 15th of this month. Mr. Ruark graduates this week in electrical engineering at Purdue. He is the son of Chester B. Ruark. county road superintendent, and wife. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Jackson, of east of Greencastle. They will reside in Mansfield. •P J* J- J* Tri Kappa To Meet Thursday Tri Kappa will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Lloyd Messersmith, Hanna Court. •I* 4* *P + "P •»* ♦ + Mount Olive Society Will Meet Thursday The Mount Olive Missionary society will meet at 2:30 oclock Thursday afternoon, June 10, at the home of Mrs. Albert Stoner. All members are urged to be present.

•J*

Happier Homes Club Met Wilh Mrs. Rowland The Happier Homes Study Club met Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Glen Rowland. Members answered roll call with household hints. Mrs. J. B. Hall gave an interesting ! talk on "Child and Adolscent Train-1 ing” and the club took part in dis- j cussing this problem. The social hour was spent in games and prizes were won by Mrs. Harold j Collins, Mrs. Charles Hale and Mrs. I Dm Rowland. 5 ,J * + + T + + +j * COALING STATION + I- -P -I- -P a- + + Mr. and Mrs. Anson Kellum spent Sunday with Mrs. Valeria Layne. The Saturday night club met at the Danville park Sunday. - Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lisby, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Jones, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Shoe and son called on Mr. and Mrs. Frank Woods and family Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Julian Petro and family visited with Mr. and Mrs. E'ncra Wright. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Runnells and daughter spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. George Smythe and family. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shafer and daughter called on Mr. and Mrs. Sammie Goodwin Sunday. Several from this community attemled the Children’s exercises at the Fillmore Christian church Sunday evening.

often it loses in the contest, being ruined for hay by the wetness. The clover in Putnam county is not being figured in the farmers’ budget this season as an asset. It was killed last year, and the season before that, by the dry weather. Alfalfa and sweet clover are being utilized as much as possible, as substitution for the clover. The shower of this forenoon produced a reading of .25 inch in the Banner’s raingauge. Reference to our “Twenty Years Ago,” today, tells of three inches on that date, with Big Walnut rampaging.

$300

If money wm help Von r n,hlv 'WnlTtr time loans to farmers. Indiana Loan 341 1 Washington i- h( J

—For Sail

New 13 plate battery, guaranteed 8 month $3 90 exchange. Get our prices on Lee tires before you buy. Scott’s Franklin Street Garage. Phone 68. 22-tf

FOR SALE: Bed and springs, dresser, sewing machine, congoleum rug 9x12. Phone 79-K or 199-Y. 7-3p.

FOR SALE: 10 fresh cows, 6 springers, 8 heifers, all Jersey dairy cows. S. B. Love, Morton. 7-6t.

FOR SALE: Cheap. Upright piano; bedroom suite, sewing machine. Cherry Transfer. 8-3p.

FOR SALE: Covered wagon trailers. Call 527 Anderson street. 5-5t.

FOR SALE: New cultipackers and rotary hoes on hand now; new mowing machine, new cultivator, binder. Walter S. Campbell. 7-3t

FOR SALE: Just received some new cultipackers, rotory hoes, and side delivery rakes. While they last, special price. Walter S. Campbell. 7-3t

for RENT: Aparim™,| mediate possession, s. c Phone 96.

FOR RENT: Six room I house, furnished or available July 1. Address' Banner.

WantM

WANTED: Cash paid,] Rugs, Furniture, Matress Clothes. Bert Wood Junk Sycamore St. Tel. 756-Y. WANTED :~hIrtr~Rj Mt tills. Oil! Mutivs.se.s, He,,,l Bei t Wood Junk Shop. 517 s* St. rel 768-Y. Two college men want tol home ior summer. Call TurnJ

WANTED: About 3 ton 1 Alfalfa hay delivered. Spis Bloomington street Position for good reliable '.J who can work steauy nelpu^l er take caiv of our country i Livestock experience desiraJ make $75 a month at first. [ Box 85 Banner.

ExperienceI Uvcstuck man| Famous line of livestock that sell everywhere. Proted ritory. Car needed. Write Ng 7941 So. Halsted. Chicago

WANTED: Any kind stock. Call 278, Greencastle i Maysville. Charges paid. Johi tel Co.

FOR SALE; Just received, one John Deere pick-up hay press, will take it out of windrows or out of stack; a 2 man hay baler. Walter S. Campbell. 7-9-12-3t

—T>ost—

New 39-Plate Battery, $3.95 exchange. Free installation. Dobbs Tire & Battery Service. Phone 789.

M-W-F-tf

LOST: Tire, tune and uhel Kelley Springiielil. between! Station and Stilesville. Harold Wright, Phone Keelsvi]

—MiseHlaneoii

FOR SALE: Gooseberries, 20c gal. when you pick them; 30c when we , pick them. Mrs. J. N. Alice, phone | Brick Chapel. 7-9-2p I

,

HAIL INSURANCE crops may be protected at sr.i Will be glad P (|U,,te prices j sell Loan and Insurance Agd| S. Jackson Street.

FOR SALE—One span 7 year old mules, mare mules and good ones; one good work mare $60.00; one 2 year old roan horse. Walter S. Campbell. 7-9-2t FOR SALE: Several good used cultivators, one row and two rows; three good used binders; other farm tools. Walter S. Campbell.

7-9-2t

Having installed electric ery I’m ready to sharpen anj tools. Phillip Hutcheson. Jr. east Manhattan. Road 40.

Protect your growing against the hazards of hail, gate this modern coverage ln^ at our office Rightsell Roan I su ranee Agency, 22 S H Street.

INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Hog receipts 5,000; holdover 236. Weights between 155-300 lbs., 25c higher. Weights below 150 lbs. steady. No schedule established on 200 IbV up. 160-180 lbs., $11.50; 180200 lbs., $11.55; 300-210 lbs., $11.60; 210-225 lbs.. $11.65; 225-235 lbs., $11.00; 235-250 lbs., $11.55; 250-260 lbs., $11.50; 260-275 lbs., $11.45; 275300 lbs., $11.40; 155-160 lbs., $10.75; 150-155 lbs., $10.50; 140-150 lbs., $10.25; 130-140 lbs,, $10.00; 120-130 lbs , $9.75; 110-120 lbs., $9.50; 100110 lbs., $9.25. Sows 10c-15c higher at $9.90-$10.50. Cattle 1.000. Calves 900. Steers and yearlings steady to strong, bulk $10.00-$12.25. Heifers fully 25c higher for week, bulk $10.00-$11.00. Cows steady, common to medium kinds $5.75-$6.50. Cutter grades $4.00$5.50. Vealers strong to 50c higher, good to choice $9.00-$9.50. Sheep 500. All classes steady. Good to choice spring lambs $11.50$12.00. Choice shorn slaughter ewes $3.00. THE HEAVY RAINFALL The rain that started the middle ot the forenoon, Wednesday, did not affect the corn cultivating seriously, but it was not welcomed by the farmers who had cut some of their alfalfa and yet had it down in the fields. This first cut of that crop comes, each year, so early in the season that it has to dodge the showers, in order to cure properly, and

MONUMENTS We build Worthy Memorial* whose architectural and smybollc fitness bear the creation of good taste. F. C. YEAGER, 17 E. Walnut St Phone 141-L.

FOR SALE: Ball Mason fruit jars, quarts with caps, 48c dozen. Furniture Exchange, East Side Square. Phone 170-L. 9-1J* FOR SALE: One Power 7 ft. mower for an F-20 tractoY Farmall, Price $35.00. Walter S. Campbell, Greencastle. 9-12-21

FOR SALE: The Don Davidson five-room house on Berry Street for only $1,900.00. $300.00 down payment. balance like rent. J. T. Christie, Real Estate at Rightsell Insurance Agency, 22 S. Jackson Street. 9-2t.

FOR SALE; Two hundred seventy acre farm in Putnam County. A low price per acre to close an estate. J. T. Christie, Real Estate at Rightsell Insurance Agency, 22 S. Jackson Street. 9-2t.

FOR SALE: Large size gooseberries. 406 W. Franklin Street. Phone 794. 9-2t

FOR SALE: Girls’ Bicycle in good condition, $8.00. 401 W. Liberty St. Ip Kappa Delta Phi rummage sale Saturday morning at 9 o’clock at courthouse. 9-3t FOR SALE: 160 acre Farm, within 4 miles of Greencastle. Good improvements and on good road. S. C. Sayers. Phone 96. 9-3t.

FORSALE- White collie pups. Second house east of cross roads school building on Stilesville road. Cabbage plants 5c per dozen, 35c per hundred; celery, pansy plants. 4 'it miles north on 43. 9ilp. —For RpntFOR RENT: Three room house In good condition, good location. Phone 646-Y. 8-2t FOR RENT: Bicknell home, west Walnut street, 6 rooms, modern. Call Bernice Craig or S. C. Sayers. Phone 96. 9-3t. I 1

Whal this si means to yoi

R. & 0. mo.nns roiiowftl I gunranti‘0'1 ini'' 1 ' 1 .' 'j back our rcpnk' 4 ' 0 " !l j For. I dealer for ni'TO j 20 years we gi v< * :l money back guarantee, 100% Satisfaction or Kj

refund.

Visit our USED CAR M 310 N. Jackson street, j see the many R. & M we have to oil'' 1 Chevrolet ami oIImtn Big trade-in allowance your present car, no nia what make or model. W cost financing. You can one of these finer cars small weekly payments. USED CAR L° T 310 N. Jackson King- Morrison Foster C°'

FtonB Sincf

1910