Speedway Flyer, Volume 9, Number 34, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1940 — Page 2
GENUINE AUCTION EASTWOOD Friday 4 0 « . PARK Saturday AUb* A * 30.
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Pictures Showing Beautiful Eastwood Park, Clermont, Indiana. IDEAL LOCATION VERY LOW TAXES HIGHLY RESTRICTED <4K. With all the conveniences. Think of it—Sidewalks, Streets, School, Churches, Stores, Utilities, and only 12 to 15 minutes to the heart of City, Indianapolis Buy a lot or many in Eastwood Park. Prolong your life years by living among beautiful trees, breathing good, pure air, out of noise and dirt.
Beautiful Wooded Lots Many Wonderful Elms, perhaps 100 years old Men who know property, My this of Eastbrook Park: “I consider this, as an auctioneer, one of the best I Have ever been employed to sell. Beautiful to say the loast.” (Signed) JOE FLESHER, President American Auction Co., Auctioneers. George G. Schmidt, Surveyor and Engineer, says of Eastwood Park “This is one of the most beautiful and ideal locations I have ever platted. (Signed) GEORGE G. SCHMIDT
THE POCKETBOOK of KNOWLEDGE
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94 Lots i On the Grounds Germont, Indiana Three Miles West Indianapolis Speedway on Highway 34 to Crawfordsville, J 4 Mile West Indianapolis Country Club, 3 Squares South Drug Store, Clermont.
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SCOUT FISH FRY Km A * 2-3 BROWNSBURG, INDIANA
AFTERNOONS 2 P. M. NIGHT 6:00 P. M.
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Band Concert On the Grounds During Sale Meals Served by Ladies of the Christian Church of Clermont TERMS are LIBERAL being 1/3 CASH Balance in 6, 12,18 and 24 Months Deeds and Abstracts for All Cash 3 % Discount For Cash THOMAS a GASAWAY,. M. D. (Owner)
Sister, Three Brothers, Have Straunge Reunion One of the most remarkable family reunions ever held in this country took place not very long ago in a little farmhouse near Kosciusko, Miss., when three brothers and a sister who, literally, were strangers sat down for their first meal together, although the youngest was 23 years old. A week before this reunion, the youngest boy had never seen his older brothers. He didn’t even know of their existence. The two older brothers had net seen one another, or their sister, for 23 years. Ernest and Joe Parsons, the two elder brothers, had met a few days before. Joe, who had married a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Jackson of Oakland, Miss., was at the Jackson home when the talk switched to the nearby school. “There’s a kid named Parsons down at the school who has eyes just like yours, Joe,” Mr. Jackson remarked. “Where does he live?” Joe asked. When told that the little Parsons boy lived on a nearby farm, Joe and his wife went to visit his parents. The father Was Ernest Parsons, Joe’s long lost brother—and they had lived only 15 miles apart nearly 20 years. The strange story was published by the Yalobusha county paper and then by the Jackson Clarion-Ledger. John McCrory, case worker at the Mississippi hospital at nearby Whitfield, read it and remembered that his name was really Parsons. He called Joe Parsons by long distance telephone, and learned that he, too, was a brother of the two men.
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Governmeut Insurance • Proves Boon to Thrifty More money was saved and more people saved money last year, according to officials of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance corporation because the savings were protected by the government. Private savings put in the care of the institutions now amount to $1,748,000,000, as compared with $1,398,000,000 saved by 2,044,000 persons in 1938, the report states. More than 2,000 institutions are now insuring their savers’ accounts up to $5,000, an increese of 104 during the* year. Meantime, the report continues, the corporation assets on November 30 were $121,914,000, with reserves of $20,659,000, representing a year’s increase of $5,499,000 and $5,310,0001 respectively. Its premium income* since its establishment to November 30 was $7,766,000 and $14,233,Q00 was derived from invested revenues. Premium income, however, it is pointed out, during the first 11 months of 1939, was $2,282,000 and invested funds revenue $3,119,000, or $309,000 and $84,000 greater thin is 1938. Operating expenses during the same period were $208,000, a slight increase. * With some 2,189 insured institutions in 1939, there have been only* seven cases in which it was necessary to give assistance, the report states. Losses which have been settled or are pending aggregate $1,250,000 and represent nine states from all sections of the country. Missouri Hills Yield
Culture 500 Years Old 'Excavators have discovered the remains of a civilization more than 500 years old, according to Robert McCormick Adams, director of a 1 crew of excavators working here. Adams said the most important finds to date are several pottery items, chipped stone instruments, bone ornaments and the remnants of three thatched-roof houses. “The ledge evidently was an often-used stopping place for nomadic hunting parties for thousands; of years,” Adams said. “We have found traces of a pre-pottery peop|P under 10-ton boulders. How king thS v boulders have lain there we can only guess.” m Adams said the village site centers • around a man-made mound, now almost destroyed by cultivation of crops. The three houses found/ so far, he said, are different. The first was about 25 feet square, with a fireplace in the middle. The roof was supported by wood posts four inches square, set in a ditch. Aid storage bin, containing parched com, was found near the fireplaoe, hr floating an agricultural peopK aL
