The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 August 1940 — Page 2

/HE DAILY BANNER, OREENCASIM!, INDIANA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 24,1940.

GOOD FOOD You will always find the Cafe Royals the home of good food that is tastily and well prepared. Make this your restaurant today!

CAFE

R O Y A L E ! ~personals

\ 1 rnr-At ’VIFYI/W

THE DAILY BANNER

■ad

Herald. Consolidated “It Waves For All” 17-19 South Jackaon^Street 8. K. Karidea, Publlabor Entered In the postoffice at Greencastle, Indiana, as second class mall j matter under Act of March 8, 1878. j Subscription price, 12 cents per I weea; 83.00 per year by mall In Puti nam County; $3.80 to 80-00 per year 1 by mall outside Putnam County.

Society Phone All Social and Personal Items To 98 Miss Hetty Bryan Society Editor

ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL CHURCH

A BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY There is complete safety there: He that dwelleth in the secret place of the Most Hiph, shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty.—Psalm

91:1.

PROPOSES SENATE REPORT fConttnned fr«*au PiiaTp Oi»p5 said he confined his resolution to the atroy because he wanted to learn the condition of “our second line —airplanes and our third line mechanized equipment." Under his proposal, the Senate would assemble in a unique secret session with all doors locked and each member pledged to secrecy to receive and debate a report from the war secretary. The report could be made in writing or could be delivered in person. Veteran Senate attaches said that secret reports from cabinet heads wer? made on several occasions during Civil war days, but they could not recall any occasion in recent times when the Senate assembled for such a purpose. Secret sessions usually are reserved for votes on impeachment proceedings or on con-tempt-of-the-Senate actions. Walsh’s resolution, which was referred to the Military Affairs committee for possible action next week, contained the following seven questions: 1 The number of useful combat airplanes by types (a) now on hand, (b) on order, and (c) the probable date that those on order will be completed. 2. The number of useful combat planes that it will be possible to acquire with the monies appropriated by the Congress and with the contract authorizations granted. 3. The number of trained pilots and trained technical experts qualified to operate and maintain combat aircraft, in distinction from training and utility planes, now (a) on active service, (b) in the reserve, and (c) the number under training. 4. The number (a) useful combat tanks and lb) the number of other

iseful combat armored motor ve- I tides on hand and (c) on order and' 1) the probable date that those on j nder will be delivered. r> The number of trained officers I ind technicians qualified to operate! and maintain the tanks and other i irmored motorized equipment (a) on | active duty, (b) in the reserve and id the number now under training. 6 The War Department’s opinion as to the defense force and equipment that will be required by the U.! S. army, in cooperation with the navy, to provide an “airplane plus tank” spearhead of sufficient strength to prevent an enemy from securing a base from which direct attack could be launched against continental United States and the

Panama canal,

7.—Is it not a fact that 40,000 men for the army air corps were provided for in the first supplementary national defense appropriation act of 1941 and that the army has recruited inly 8.000 of them and are suspending further recruiting for lack of training facilities and that the army officials have stated that the entire 40,000 could be recruited voluntarily as rapidly if the army was disposed to do so and had the proper facilities.

JAPAN GETS WARNING

Mission Group to Hear Greeneastte Woman Mrs. E. R. Barth'tt of Greewcastle, recently elected to the Methodist National Board of Missions, will speak at a spiritual retreat of Uv Methodist Woman's Foreign Mission ary Societies at 9 o’clock Wednesday morning in the New Jersey Street Methodist Church. The Rev. M. O. Robbins, Mrs. Robbins and Mrs. J. H. Smiley will give reports.- The Edgewood Auxiliary will present a demonstration of ’’Th-: Methodist Woman” Mrs. Charles Sedam, district president, will preside.—Indianapolis Star.

+ + -h +

j Groveland Community Club Held Guest Day Meeting

_ . _ , The Groveland Community Club

Mr. and Mrs. Chailes Templin of , , , held its annual guest day meeting,

Allentown, Pa., spent Tuesday night I ... , ... ,, . .. . ‘ Thursday afternoon. August 22nd at with Mr. and Mrs. Marry Neier. J .

I the heme of Mrs. Clem Rissler.

The Woman's Relief Corp will j Thirty members and the following meet in regular session at 2:30 o'- : guests were present: Mesdames clock Monday afternoon at the hall. I Lloyl Summers, Ira Lewis, Lona

Smith, John Satte.Iy, Chesley Me-

and LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

(Contlnuril Irbm I’nur Onrk

tremely blunt and the most vigorous the State Department has used in all the series of communications it has sent to Tokyo during the past

three years.

The informants said the document carrie,I farther and brought up to date the warning contained in the address made by the American Ambassador in Tokyo, Joseph C. Grew, on Oct. 19, 1939, following his return to his post from Washington.

THE METZ CAFE

Will Open For Business

Sunday, Aug. 25 Come in and try our Chicken Dinners.

BAINBRIDGE, INDIANA

Elrst door east of Regal Store on Main Street.

Dr. and Mrs. F. C. Tilden have returned from Bay View, Michigan where they have been spending the

past few weeks.

Mr. an ' Mrs. Ray Titus of Great Bend, Kan., spent Thursday night with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Neier of

near Somerset.

Claire Williams is spending the week end in Chicago. While there, he will see the New York Giants and the Chicago Cubs play a double-

header.

Bee Hive Rebekah Lo Ige No. 10‘j will meet Monday evening, at 8 o’clock. This is the last meeting befo:e the district meeting which will be held at Monrovia on September 6. Mrs. George R. Frank of Greenwood, Indiana, underwent an operation at the Putnam county hospital Saturday morning. Mrs. Frank was formerly Miss Evaline Clark. Miss Mary Alice Bidgood of Osborn, Ohio, and Miss Madge Clark of Crawfordsivlle have been spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Glen Clark and Mr. and Mrs. Sila. Dow east of the city. Mr. and Mts. Dale Ross of Bainbridge and Mr. and M s. George York of Greencastle will attend the Renfro Valley Barn llance tonight and will spend a few days sight seeing in the Smoky Mountains anu other points of interest in southern Tennessee and Kentucky. Miss Miriam Peck returned home Friday from California where she has spent the summer. Miss Peck attended school during the summer session at the University of Southern California. Enroute home she stopped in San Francisco where she visited friends and relatives and at-

tended the fair.

Mra. Wilbur Chadd. who has been ill for some time, is slowly recovering j her health at ther home in this city. *1 The American Legion will meet ♦ I Monday evening at 8 o’clock at the

* j Legic

V Former Resident of

Putuaimillo Becomes Bride Mrs. W. O. Lewis has received the announcement of the marriaie of Miss Louise Hodge, daughter of Tr. and Mis. J. VV. Hodge of Cheney, vVashington to Aldon R. Millar, ■vhich took place Satu day, the 24th >f August at eight o’clock at the

J. M.- Nelson, Vicar. 720 N. Locust Street. 10:30 a. m. Holy Communion and Sermon, "Christianity's Counter Offensive, Counting the Cost.”

GUBIN MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH

Congregational church.

Mr. and Mrs. Hodge are former, Putnamville residents and have j nany friends in this county. Miss |

lodge was a music teacher in the ; Pol . ter District Vancouver, Wash, public schools the j Specia i mu sic by

Claude M. McClu ’e. Minister. Carmen Siewert, acting organist. 9:15 a. m. Church School. Men’s bible class speaker: Dr. F. M. Vree-

land.

10:00 a. m. Morning Worship. Sermon theme: ‘The Religious Challenge of Today.” Guest Minister, Dr. J. E.

Superintendent.

Miss

QUICK CASH

ON YOUR AUTOM* HOUSEH GOODS

livestock Let Us Advance You Th, Money You Want.

Indiana Loan Ci

19^J 1C. WaAhington

i

CHRISTIAN SCnCVCE 429 Anderson street. Sunday service, 11 i. m. Third Wednesday of the

p. m.

Sunday school, 9:30 a. nt Reading room 429 Anderew

i open each Wednesday, 2 tol..

Carmen i

PUBLIC SALE OF THE SMOKE HOUSE AT CLOVERDALE Tuesday, September 3 at 1:00 p. m. Consisting of one electric gasoline pump, one air compressor, one It ease cooling Ixix, same as new, one 24-Inch Pedestal Kan, used one week, one fuel oil hu tiing heating stove, one enclosed wall ease and four other show eases, wall seats, counters and shelving and all remaining stock of merchandise, consisting of tobacco, cigars, etc. TERMS—CASH. JOHN MEEK CLARENCE VESTAL, Auctioneer.

WHERE FRIENDS MEET A Friendly Atmosphere Pervades The Lincoln Because It Is The POPULAR MEETING AND EATING — PLACE IN GREENCASTLE — Come In And Join Your Friends

HAVE YOU TRIED THOSE DELICIOUS SUNDAY DINNERS A ItKAI. TREAT Lincoln Restaurant

24 S. VINE STREET (GLEN DEEM. Prop.)

PHONE 893

Home. The appointment of

committee members will be made for the coming year. Following the meeting the Legion members will

join the Auxiliary for refreshments. The remains of Mrs. Ella Rose

Mahan, former resident of Russellville and Crawfordsville, who died

Thursday at the home of a son »

Charlottesville, Va., arrived Friday at Crawfordsville and funeral services were held Saturday forenoon, with inteiment in the Russellville cemetery. Lawton Mahan, the soi., accompanied the remains of his

mother.

In the recently-held pulling contest at Vinegar Hill, in Clay county, teams entered by Phil Adamson of Lena were first in the “3.000 pounds and over" and also the "under 3,8uu pounds" classes. The contest will be repeated within a couple of weeks as the ground over which the teams pulled was soft from rain and tiw contest was declared unsati: factory for that reason. In the list of the pastors' assign ments announced yesterday at the' Yearling Meeting of the Friends at Plainfield, Carl and Lena Cox were again assigned to the Amo churo» and it is understood Mrs. Cox again is to serve as pastor of the Walnut Chapel Friends church in eastern Jefferson township. Morris J. Handley, ot Coatsville, was named one of the delegates to the Five Years’

Meeting.

Kerran, Cecil Ba Uett, Clarence Beck, Harry Plum, Leonard Chatham, Lowell Johnson, Donovan Lobdell, Howard Poff, Robert Harris Robert Fritz, Fred Rowen, A- H. Hendricks, M. E. Smith, Stanley Cook, James Lewman, Dennis Jones Jennie Graham, Ella Eggers, and the Misses Jeanette Sutherlin, Christina Eggers, Minnie Graves, Pauline FulUr, Mildred Sutherlin, Nellie McVay, Frances Sutherlin, Martha Lou Goodhart, Helen Shepherd, Mary Ellen Farrow, Betty Sutherlin ana Marjory Miles. The club collect was read by Mrs. George Farrow followed by the roll call and the introduction of guests. Letters from Mrs. Handy and Mrv Trembly, county club president and secretary were read. Musical selections were given by Helen Shepherd. Frances Sutherlin, Thelma Jean Rissler, Hester Rissler and little Cornelia and Mary Sears. Other features of the prog am consisted of a short playlet given by Miss Graie Arnold and Mrs. Earl Sutherlin, Mrs. Ren Solomon, Mrs. Stanley Sears, Mrs. Arthur Miles, Mrs. Afthur Eggers, Mrs. Ernest McCloud and Mrs. El Ion Miles and several readings anti pianoalogues by Mrs. Her-

schel Cline.

After the program refreshments of ice cream, waffers, iced tea and mints were served. The fine program and the social hour were greatly enjoyed by all present.

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I/Cgimi Auxiliary To Hold Installation Put.nam County Unit No. 58 American Legion Auxiliary will hold its stated meeting Monday evening, August 20, at 8 o'clock at the Legion Home. Following the business session installation of officers will be held with Mrs. Rachael Buis, junior past president, as installing officei. Following the close of the meeting refreshments will be served in the dining room to both the Auxiliary and Legion members.

THOMAS GOOD ENTERS PLEA OF INNOCENCE

Rugs — will last longer — look brighter and are healthier after our expert cleaning. Home Laundry &

Cleaners.

24-lt.

Let us do your Kodak finishing. We do not send them out of town. We give them individual attention.

Thomas Good, 19, of Waveland arrested at Greencastle by State Policeman James Gilliland and Sheriff Harold Roth, entered a plea of innocence when arraigned at Cra'7fordsville Friday before Justice of the Peace Anthony Watts on charges of public intoxication and drunken driving. The youth’s trial was set for Thursday, August 29, and he was lodged- in the Montgomery county jail when he was unable to provide $100 bond. Good was taken into custody on an affidavit signed by Night Marshall Howard Birchfleld of Waveland.

Additional Locals Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Vermillion will return home Sunday from Lake Tippecanoe where they have been the last week on a vacation. Misses Edith Nichols and Roberta Nowgent went, Friday, to Indianapolis to attend the Girls' State FanSchool, which will be in session two weeks. The Board of Commissioners of Putnam county met this afternoon to consider bids for the coal required this season for the county heating plant which heats the jail and the court house and also for heating of the county infirmary.

IvOST: Boys’ blue wool slipover

and our prices are only 25c & 30c a' sweater, size fourteen, left on bench roll, of 8 exposures. The Cammack by ball diamond, Robe Ann Park, Studio, twenty-four hour service. | Wednesday morning. Please cal!

24-7t, 771-M. 24-Ip

last year. 4 * 4. -a.

»ig Walnut Ladies Aid Met All Day Thursday

The Ladies Aid of the Big W’alut Baptist church met Thursday for m all day meeting with Mrs. Cora lendmeyer. A delicious pitch in dinner was served at noon. The worn f the day was quilting a comfort, i After dinner the meeting was op-1 ned by the president Mrs. Cleo i Rissler. Prayer was offered by M s. [ Edith Daggy. Song "In The Garden" i -vas sung by a number of girls. Spe:ial song "A Saviour For Me” wis | ung by Betty Pitts and Virginia • ’ratt. Scripture reading by Mrs,

Siewert, organist and

choir.

6:00 p.

the church

AIR ALARM Sounded i f Continued *ruin

m. High School Epworth i sa jd.

League. Leader, Madonna Call. The public is cordially invited to

attend.

THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Victor L. Raphael, Minister. Jack Gillespie, Organist. Church school 9:30 a. m. Classes for all age groups. Worship 10:35 a. m. Sermon theme: "The Comparative in Life.-’ Music: iPrelude” Chopin; Offertory “Intermezzo" Brahms.

CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

_ . . i All services will be held in the ed-

\gnes Spears. Roll call and the sec-i

» r , „ ueational building.

/etary's report followed. Two new I members were welcomed, Mrs. Olive ! Nichols and Mrs. Co a Sendmeyer. j The next meeting will be Septem- j her 121 h at the home of Mrs. Nellie | Phillips with Mrs. Lola Bullerdi.-k ! assisting hostess. Members and j guests present were the Mesdames Lucrie Aker, Lola Bullerdick, Gladys Cline, Caroline Cagle, Edith Daggy, Sffie Herbert, Anna Pollom, Lre Rissler, Alma Rissler, Cleo Rissler, Lola Rissler, Iva Rissler, Flora Young, Rose Walden, Virginia BulIcrdick, Nellie Phillips, Rosemary Bullerdick and daughter Keneen Rae, Margaret Bullerdick, Marjorie Fritzinger and son David, Lucy

R“v. 13. F. Singhurse, pastor. Cars will go for the children on usual route at 9:00 a. m. Bible school at 9:30 a. m. Richard Whelan Supt. Morning wo ship hour, 10:45. N. Y. P. S. 6:45 p. m. A young man from South America to address the young people in

this hour.

Song services of the songs you like, everyone taking part, 7:30. Special message in song at 8:10. Evangelistic message 8:20.

The big shells may lad where—and moving va

trucking household posseatte

havens farther inland.

Ominous signs that anrith^ nation may soon he swept into developed as Itally threatened h vade Greece immediately if ; starts to establish bases on G

lands.

In this crisis, with Britain firming her pledge to give Grew military aid in the event of m ian invasion, the Greek govtcalled up four more classes ol “specialists.” Balkan troubles appeared in j other quarter as observers pit i probable collapse of the Rimr j Hungarion negotiations on j gary’s claim of the territoij Transylvania and Rumania calM j reserve officers to duty. | Germany has instructed Rib to settle the territorial claims o( | Hungary and Bulgaria, but Hungarians expressed belief thu| situation was too explosive for Gemian-Italian axis to want to' a hand in it right away.

Texts: “Lift up your eyes and

Cline, Mildred Neese and children! , ook on the fields ” John . 4:35. -And m-n loa Pbvilla an,! Halo T/nv i »-o- I ^ ^ ^ that Elisha passed

Charles, Phyllis and Dale Kay, Are-

letta Killon, Olive Nichols, Agnes , to ahunem thl , re wa3 Spears, Marie Neese, Mildred Neese I man n Kinf , s 4:8 and daughter Betty Lou, Ruth Craft, prayer meeting Thursd

and son Gale, Misses Vera Cline, | „

Mamie Cline, Marylee Aker, Virgin-} ia Ann Neese, Betty Pitts, Virginia Craft, Evelyn Craft, Margaret Jean Rissler, Mary Roab, Mary Yanders, Mary Agnes Spears, Betty Spears, Ethel Marie Spears, TCffie Neese, Roda Neese, Ellen Bullerdick and the hostess Mrs. Cora Sendmeyer.

great wo-

7:30

Richard Whelan in charge. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

^4* + + + + + + + + , I' + + + 0 + ANNIVERSARIES + Q -p -F -!- •!• -p -l- *1* -p -p -P *P •{• -P Birthdays Mrs. Don Ellis, Northwood, today, August 24, 1940. Joan Van Dyke, daughter of Prof, and Mrs. Van Dyke, Bloomington stre't, 4 years old today, August 24. 1940. Carl Robert Myers of Sunday, August 25. Mrs. James Estep, Greencaste, R. 4, Sunday, August 25. J. F. Long, 611 south Locust street, today, August 24. Mrs. James Skimmerhorn, north Indiana, today, August 24. Mrs. Robert Goldsberry, Greencastle, R. R. 3., today, August 24. , Miss Lucille Grimes, Greencastle, today, August 24.

this city,

318

J. O. CAMMACK RETURNS FROM CONVENTION

J. O. Cammack has returned from Chicago where he attended the contention of the Photographers Assoriation of America held in the

Stevens Hotel in that city.

It was the largest meeting of the rind ever held. An exhibit of photographic appliances that have come >ut in the last year or two was of inusual merit. New lights and new dims have almost changed complctey the old system of making photo-

graphs.

The thing that seemed to attract he most attention was a new light hat will make a picture in a hundedth thousandth part of a second, >r even faster. It will stop motion >f any kind and no doubt will

treat scientific value.

be of

and

J. Drover Forward, minister.

9:30 a. m. Bible school.

10:30 a. m. Morning worship. Mrs. J. H. Cope, a returned missionary

from Burma, will speak. 6:30 p. m. Junior B. Y. P. U.

6:30 p. m. Intermediate B. Y. P. U. 6:30 p. m. High School B. Y. P. U.

6:30 p. m. Adult Union.

7:30 p. m. Evening worship. The Women’s Missionary Society of the church will sponsor a stereopticon lecture, theme: “The Sythe

Sickle In Burma.”

7:30 p. m. Thursday, prayer and

praise service.

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH H. C. Fellers, minister. Eugene Pennington, minister of

music.

“A Useless Burden” will be the subject of the minister’s message at the morning worship hour tomorrow at 10:00 o’clock. There will be no church school tomorrow morning, as all staff members are being given a month’s vacation. Visitors are cordially invited to all services of this church.

APOSTOLIC GOSPEL TABERNACLE Located on Washington street road on Commercial Place. Sister Peggy Rhoades, pastor. Sunday school 2:00 p, m. Classes for all ages. Mid week services on Tuesday and Thursday evenings. Evangelistic services Sunday evening at 7:45 p. m. with special songs and music. Everyone Invited to attend. EIUST PENTECOST MISSION Corner Maple Avenue and Apple Sts. Rev. Mary Hignite, pastor. H. W. Stone, Sunday School Supt Sunday School 9:30. Mid-week prayer meeting Wednesday and FMday 7:30 p. m. Everybody welcome.

TODAY—AUG. 24 New U. S. Capitol Bldg

started 1818.

Flowers are the Cheeriest Pre-

scription for the 111.

EITEL'S FLOWERS

15 E. Wash., St.

Phone 636

NOTICE I have moved from my former location, 24’ E. Wash St. (over Sam Hanna’s Book Store) and am now located in my new office in the Alamo Building. DR. I). J. STEELE PHONE ’238

LONDON, Aug. 24 (IT)-A ;ort that a strong formation of man planes was crossing tbe ■ast coast brought an air mid ril the London aiea today as raif jf people were on the way to ■ Buses, Subway trains and p* rians continued on thoirwayi turbed a.nd air raid shelters in ral Lonrion were almost empty. The “all clear" signal was

• fter half an hour.

LONDON, Aug. 24 (UP)great explosions, believed to been caused by artillery shell! from the French coast, shook

Dover area at 10

rn. EST.) Sirens warned the] to take to cover. No ail planes visible or audible at the time

today (S

WOMEN RECEIVE 1’KIVIHX <C’onllnne<] from Piurr The missionary enterprise, home foreign,, is the most unifying af In the world today. Lastly, all women are needed, the new set-up. We need trength of numbers as well as of purpose. No one can be » With our perfected machinery must have Christ-filled personalt a vast company of Methodist WL united in Christian service.

FOR SALE: Locust posts 7 It, in. cut in January. 25c each. Lillian Smith, R. 1.

# & M Would you let a,&*r cent* against a fatndred dolUrf TitmLm* with Simpson Stoner First-Citizens Bank BldgPhone 6