The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 February 1924 — Page 3

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THE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 29,1924.

Why go halfway? AIL BRAN is a necessity! \Then conetipation is ripping the health out of your body you can't afford to temporize! For health's sake—DON’T—when bran, Kellogg’s Bran, because it is ALL BRAN, is guaranteed to give you positive, permanent relief! Know the truth about bran! To be efficacious, to give you sought-for relief, bran must be ALL BRAN! Foods with a part bran content cannot be considered as a relief for constipation sufferers! These foods do not have the bulk or “roughage” to drive out the conditions that are undermining your health! What you need for 100 per cent relief is 100 per cent bran, and that is what you get when you buy Kellogg’s Bran IT IS ALL BRAN! And it is 100 per cent efficient, as your physician will tell you! Kellogg’s Bran, all cooked, krumbled and ready to eat, is delicious as a cereal or used in baking and cooking. Eat two tablespoonfuls daily, or as much with each meal in chronic cases—and rid yourself of constipation and the toxic poisons that lead to many of the most dreaded human ailments!

»oV*I nem ! >ep —Kellogg’s Bran is BRAN and guaranteed to give

per cent relief! DON’T GO HALF-WAY!

All grocers.

ALL

you 100

oooooocxxxxxxx>dooc)ooo<xocxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx5 turday Cash Neat Specials ra Special Fresh Brains, !b ••10 dm!? Beef per lb • • • • 10 c - esh Spare Ribs, lb ■}? sh Pork Shoulder (Whole) .per lb ^ < Hp d M r Mr v.v. $ mtlf Baoon < whole or half > » er DELIVER W. H. EITELJ0RGE

MORTON

£ s, p Su T m,ay March ist - «• Li zenby, Pastor.

Su nJay School. ' m - Sermon:

Home and the Comniuntiy 6:30 p. m. Training Class

7:30 p. m. Sermon:

ueation.”

‘Church in Ed-

ROACHDALE, ROUTE 1

Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Stoner are the ' proud parents of a son, born Wednesday. . Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Witt enter- 1

; tained company over Sunday.

i Mrs. E ar [ Shumaker spent Wed-1 > !i ay with Mrs. Cecil Stoner and 1 sons i

ons.

Mose Higgle and Harold Young! v ro callers in Bainbridge Saturday. M . Glasgow Britton called on Mrs. C eci! Stoner, Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Maud and Leona Robbins callr 1 on ?klrs. Joe Woody of Raccoon Friday night. Fay Obenchain called on Mose Rigdo and wife one afternoon last week. Mrs. Roy Stultz and Mrs. Ed. Stoner of Bainbridge spent Sunday with Cecil Stoner and family. Mrs. Earl Shumaker and children Irene and James spent the week-end, the guest of Mr. Shumaker’s sister

i and family, of near Linden.

JOHNS SWITCH Mr. Dial and Mr. Bales are hauling gravel to fill up some of the ruts in the roads which have been almost impassable for some time. Earl Hutcheson is working at Limedale.

J HIUS£4dis once" ■ '■—Stops Colds in 24 Hours Hill's Cascara Bromide Quinine gives quicker relief than any other cold or la grippe remedy. Tablets disintegrate in 10 seconds. Effectiveness proved in millions of cases. Demand red box hearing Mr. Hill’s portrait. All druggists— 30 cents. mm J* quinine v\. n. mix co. mtkou.uich. CLASSIFIED - ADS For Sale.

March 4—is the night.

26- It

FOR SALE — 1 horse, 6 years old; International cultivator used one season; 1 interational Disk Harrow. 50 bushels of oats. Call Rural 106. 25-eod-3p.

Fresh Country eyes at 25c per doz-

NOTICE— Have your mortgage exemptions made out at the auditor’s office. 23-6p.

Wanted.

WANTED—A dish washer. Call j Mrs. Farmer at Grand Central Ho- ; tel. 3t

Mortgage Exemptions I guarantee credit on your taxes. I have the number of the book and the page of your mortgage. See me— J. B. HARRIS, Notary Public, at the Court House. 29-10t

WANTED — A farm from about 180 to 200 acres. Must be worth the money. Theodore Crawley. 29-2p !

WANTED — Buff Orpington rooster. Phone Rural 41. Ip.

For Home made bread and angel food cakes, call 694-Y. 28-3p

Mrs. Unger will give a dinner and | Attend the pie and cake market at

quilting for a number of ladies near

stop 36, Thursday.

Mrs. Alford Barricks and little son, of Cloverdale, spent the week-end at

stop 35.

Mrs. John White was operated on for goiter at the Putnam county hospital Friday and is getting along fine Lucy Hutcheson visited in Reelsville Saturday. Several from stop 35 attended the funeral of Mrs. Edith Hauck Tuesday morning which was conducted at the home near Limedale. William Hutcheson visited Mr. and James P. Bence, Sunday. Mrs. Maude McElroy visited Mrs. Emma White, at the hospital Mon- i day afternoon. | Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Higgins spent Saturday with the former’s parents, of near Lizton. Mrs. John Cash and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Newman visited Thursday with ' Mr. and Mrs. U. S. Monday.

Rector Bros. Saturday morning. 28-2t

Fresh country eggs at 25c per dozen. Louis F. Hays. South Side Square. 28-2t

March 4th—be there.

26-4t

FOR SALE—Buff Orpington eggs. Phone Rural 106. 29-6p.

WANTED—A cook, none but experienced need apply, Call 800. 28-3t

March 4th—is the night.

26-tt

WANTED—Woman for general house work, no washing and a good home Phone 785-X. 29-2t

Lost

LOST—10 High School Orchestra Tickets, finder phone 759-L. 29tf.

AUCTION SALE We will sell at public auction on the Williamson farm about four miles west of Greencastle on the old State Road and one half mile south of the Little Walnut Creek bridge on Wed. MarchS, ‘24 commencing at 10:30 o'clock, the fol-

lowing personal property: HORSES AND MULES

1-1300 lb. horse, 8 years old good worker. ] team of six year old big mules, 16 1-2 hands, sound, well broke and as good farm team as there is in the county. 1 team of 3 year old mules, sound, worked some last season One 9 year sorrel horse, good worker

all harness. CATTLE

One 8 year old Jersey cow, giving good flow of milk. One 7 year old shorthorn cow. be fresh by sale, an extra good milk cow. One 5 year old extra good Shorthorn cow. One 2 year old Shorthorn heifer, be fresh in May. One coming 2 year Jersey heifer, bred. One. coming 2 year pure bred Shorthorn bull calf from H. 0. Bait man's herd. HOGS—DUROC 20 tried brood sows, some to farrow by day of sale, the sows are mostly pure bred. 4 Duroc gilts, bred for April farrow (these gilts are registered). 50 shoats weighing from 70 to 100 lbs. 2 Duroc male hogs, 2

years old.

FARMING IMPLEMENTS

1 good farm wagon, 1 hay frame, 1 gravel bed, 1 new corn planter used last year, soy bean attachment and check kire, 1 manure spreader, 1 sulky Oliver breaking plow, 14 inch; 1. 404 Oliver walking plow, 13 inch: 1 Oliver 40 breaking plow, 1 good riding cultivator, 1 6-ft. McCormick mowing machine, 1, -horse diskwheat drill, 1, 7-shovel, 1 horse cultivator, 1 double shovel plow, 1 Stewart horse

FOR SALE—First class Little Red clover seed. John Bowen, R. 2. 28-2t

The Catholic Ladies will hold a market Saturday at First National Bank. Home cooked food. 28-2t

FOR SALE—Practically new Ford Fordor Sedan, driven about 100 ml., spare tire, Boyce motometer, rear view mirror, dash, parking, and stop lights, folding luggage carrier, aluminum slip plates, Williams accelerator, Arvin heater, automatic wind

Clarence Sutherlin and family cal- shield cleaner, Phone 134. 29-lt

A SPLENDID FEELING

. That tired, half-sick, discouraged feel- I clipper. 1 sixty-tooth harrow, 1 new mg caused by a torpid liver and consti- , f arin f orgc j set of lather team

pated bowels can be gotten rid of with surprising promptness by using Ilerbinc. You feel its beneficial effect with the first dose as its purifying and regulating effect is thorough and complete. It not only drives out bile and impurities but it imparts a splendid feeling of exhilaration, strength, vim, and buoyancy of spirits.

Price 60c. Sold by

Sold by Owl Drug Store

DATA OF INTEREST TO POULTRY BREEDERS

night.

on Oran Buis and wife Saturday i

FOR SALE—Saturday, March 1st

Marvin Weldon and Ray McGinnis at Ur. James Barn, ten head of mules

and Harold Storm

CLOSING- OUT SALE v,ill sell at public auction at the Hoffman Bros, farm, known as the (mien place, two miles north of Greencastle, on the Bainbridge road, ■30 a. m., on .... Tuesday, M arch 4, 1924

The following Property, to-wit:

0RSES AND MULES. Pair black mares 8 and 9 years old, weight bs., sound and good in all harness; bay and brown mare, weight 2400 o'.’nd and a real team, 7 years old; one gray mare, weight 1100 lbs., and a good one; one pair mare mules coming two years old, sound. *S. Seven head of good dairy cows, giving good flow of milk. GS AND SHEEP. 16 brood sows, mostly Duroc, with pigs by side by t" sale or soon after; one male black Poland hog; 45 head of feeding * weighing 60 to 75 pounds. 15 head breeding ewes to lamb March ae buck. tvV AND GRAIN. 1,500 to 2,000 bushels of First Class bottom corn, d earlp; 100 to200 bushels good feeding oats; 100 bushels good seed

3 to 10 tons first class baled clover hay.

’DEMENTS. One Fordson tractor and plows, good as new, used one ! two wagons, one nearly new; one Oliver riding-breaking plow, one airow and tandem, one Black Hawk corn planter with check row atent, two John Deere riding cultivators, one steel roller, one Deering g machine, one hay rake, one hay frame, one platform scale, one set tolslersand chains, one three.horse evener, two sets oi work harness, t of wire stretchers, one tank heater, one set of pullies, 13 gahanhicken coops, scoop board and other small articles not mentioned. RMS. $5.00 and under cash. Over $5.00 a credit of nine months will ten, rotes drawing 8% interest from date. 2‘7o off for cash. Notes be bankable and property settled for on day of sale. Dinner win ue

by the Ladies’ Aid of Brick Chapel.

offman Bros. & Buis, Owners Dobbs, Vestal and Rector, Auctioneers; .Paul Albin, Clerk

called on Lester Thursday night.

Roy Buis and family visited Sunday i at lisha McAnanch’s. Aunt Sallie Reed, who has been sick for several days is unimproved. Eber Hamliton and wife of Greencastle were Sunday visitors with Wm. Newman and family. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Buis and son Burl visited with George Ruark and

wife.

and anything

bring in.

else anyone

has to 26-4t

forge.

harness, 1 set of chain team harness, 1 good set of single buggy harness and other articles. GRAIN 1,000 to 1,200 bu. of early yellow corn, a few bushels early picked seed corn, 25 to 100 bu. of oats. TERMS All sums under $5.00 cash, over $5 six months time will be given, all notes to be bankable with 8% interest from date, with 27c off for cash. Jesse Sears Pearl Williamson

TO-NIGHT Tomorrow Alright

KEEPING WELL An N* Tablrt la vegetable aperient) ta.cn at-ta night will help keep you well, by toning and strengthening your digestion and elimination.

Get a 25'Box

TIsed for mw ^OVcan

Chips off fhe Old Block N? JUNIORS—Little NRs Ono-third the regular dose. Made of the same ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adult?*. ■■SOLD BY YOUR DRUGGIST R. P. MULLINS

a®afafaiaiai3iaiajaia®aja/siaiaiajajaia®B8[ 1 ' | YOU GET THE MONEY THE SAME DAY YOU ASK FOR IT $20.00 TO $300.00 [§j on Automobiles, Furaiturcv Pianos, Live Stock, etc. INDIANA LOAN CO. Room 3 Donner Bldg. Open Thursday of each week

OSCAR RECTOR, Auctioneer.

PAUL ALBIN, Clerk.

Dinner will be served on the grounds

BAINBRIDGE, R. R. 1

Buy Cake. Pies, rolls, candy, etc at the market Saturday at First National Bank. Catholic ladies. 28-2t

SICKLY, PEEVISH CHILDREN Children suffering from intestinal worms are cro^s, restless and unhealthy. There are other symptoms, however. If the child is pale, has dark rings under the eyes, bad breath and takes no interest in play, it is almost a certainty that worms are eating away its vitality. The surest ; remedy for worms is White’s Cream Vermifuge. It is positive destruction to the worms but harmless to the child. Price

35c. Sold by

Sold by Owl Drug Store

PUBLIC SALE of house hold goods. I will sell at my residence on north Main street in Fillmore on THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1924, at 1 o’clock p. m., my household goods, consisting of beds, chairs, tables, rugs, stand tables, kitchen cabinet, | wardrobes, sewing machine, telephone, washing machine, 3-burner i oil stove, crocks, jars and many oth- j er articles too numerous to mention, j

O H ARNOLD' tests * ast • vear as to varieties are as

On testing of flock.- for Bacillary

W’hite Diarrhea.

Dr. L. A. Ray, of Cloverdale, who have been testing flocks for Bacillary White Diarrhea this winter, has sent the following data to County Agent

O. H. McNary:

j Total number of birds tested.... 1200 j Milton Bowers and wife, Will Oben- ■ Males reacting 50'chain and wife and Willis Crodian, i Females reacting 28'. wife and son Jame Roy, helped butj This shows that the males are much cher hogs at Claude Crodian’s Friday, heavier carriers of the disease than j William Sweet, who has been workthe females. j ng f 0 r Robert Detro, returned to his

Tlie highest and lowest percentage home in Illinois, Friday. | according to varieties as tested by | Pitts Fry remains quite poorly. Dr. Ray are as follows: j* Miss Myrtle Dove who was serious 1 flock Rhode Island Reds, 00 test- ]y sick at Indianapolis, is

Flesh/

the

Ayf ANY aro

IVl turned to gaze

ed, 72 reactors.

1 flock White Plymouth Rocks, 208

tested, 5 reactors.

The figures given at the Purdue j Short Course as compiled by their

Th., Fri^ tu.p

FOR SALE—Ford Sedan. Good condition. See C. W. Otis. 28-3t

EAST MARION Revival meeting began Saturday night at the M. E. church at Mt. Meridian, conducted by Rev. P. H. Downey, of Putnamville. Everyone has a cordial invitation to these ser- j

vices.

Mrs. Lora Quinlan spent Monday with Mrs. Dovie Bryan. Mr. Paris and family of Greer.- j castle visited Sunday with John Ei-1 lett and family. Mr. PRlett has been! ill for the past several days. Harold McNary and wife, of Greencastle, spent Tuesday night with Mr. and Mrs. Oran Buis. Mr. and Mrs. Calrence Sutherlin and son visited Friday with Tom Sutherlin and family. Miss Winnie Merricks, of Roaneke, Virginia, who has been visiting with her sister, Mrs. John Webster and and family, for the past several weeks, returned home Friday.

FOR SALE—Seven room, modern house. See owner No. 13 Bloomington St_ 28-3p

For Rent,

FOR RENT — Large Modern sleeping room, men preferred. 105 W. Columbia street. 28-3p.

follows:

W'hite Wyandottes, 44% reacted. Rhode Island Reds, 22% reacted. Barred Rocks, 20% reacted. White Leghorns, 9% reacted. The instructor at the Shert Course said that for many years the White Wyandottes had had a very low hatching rate, while the hatching rate for

eyes that are with keen a<4-

■ miration on the well developed, healthy girl no matter where she may be—on the rapidly moving thoroughfare or gliding gracefully

, over the dance floor.

reported | e y es turn because we all ap-

getting along fine. predate the girl with the figure Charley Crodian and wife were in 1 B0 ,irl " an d plump—the girl with

| radiantly red cheeks, cheeks that

Bainbridge Saturday. . carry a touch of roses from nature's Born to Ray Stultz and wife, a son. town garden the girl with the sparChick Stultz and family spent the 1 kling eyes, keen and sharp—the girl day, Friday with Jo hn Stultz and ^ buoyaQcy and the o£ family. ; Not necessarily an out-of-doors

Roy Detro and wife and Forest Detro called on Otha Bales and wife Fri-

day evening.

GERMANY STILL DANGEROUS

PARIS, Feb. 29.—(UP)—“Blow a whistle and the skeleton of Germany

White Leghorns had been very high, j immediately would recover skin,

Indications would prove that Bacillary J muscles, blood and nerves, the same | will lDuncT them. It” contains "only

| girl. Just a girl with ever increan- ' ing blood celts. Just a girl filled j with the vim and vigor of youth. I S. S. S., since 1826, has stood for I increased blood cells. S. S. S. means restored strength—rekindled vitality —added energy. Take S. S. S. and watch the bloom of youth rctoun to your cheeks. Watch that flabby, ill nourished flesh fade away before I flesh that is firm and plump. Bed

blood cells will do it and S. S. S.

White Diarrhea was a vital factor in

this problem.

H. S. O. March 4th.

26-It

Found.

FOUND—Newspaper directory of Inidiana, owner may have same by paying adv. charges. 29-lt

Miscellaneous

Fresh Country eggs at 25c per dozen. Kash and Karry Store. .South Side Square. 28-2t

PALESTINE

Mrs. Will Barker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Hylton died Saturday

at her home, on® mile west of New, „ _ . , „ m. l u . * f ., students, call Warren Dee, who has Maysvil e. She has been sick for the , \ ^ „ , * u *

NOTICE

Any merchant or townspeople, who have regular work or odd jobs for

charge of the Employment bureau of the Y M C A. Phone 650. 12-fr

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

“Christianity, TRY BANNER WANT ADS.

past 28 months. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Campbell, of Indianapolis, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Osborn. Leonard Alexander was ir, Indianapolis, Monday. Miss Grace Buggy was in Greencastle, Saturday and Sunday. Several from around here attended the funeral of Mrs. Will Barker at New Maysville, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Steward and Sam Crossby spent Sunday with Earl

Crossby.

Fred Beck was in Greencastle on. will hold a business, Monday. First National Bank.

Automobile Owners, before insur-

ing your car, see me for rates, Accident. R. H. Newgent, ditrict manager, Security Automobile Insurance Company. 1 Wed. and Fri. tf

SEE LUCAS AND MASTEN

for all kinds of insurance farm and and town property for sale; coal; real

estate, preferreds and bends.

LUCAS & MASTEN

South Jackson St. 31 tu. & fri. tf

David Shnee to William Smith, lot in Bainbridge, $1. John P. Reason to Isaac B. Case, 95 acres in Washington tp, $1. C. L. Perkins to E. H. Bettis, 130 acres in Clinton tp., $1 Clay Bettis to C L. Perkins, 81 acres in Clinton tp. $1. Louis Morrison to W. H. McClure lot in Hoosler Highlands, $15. Jerry J. Long to Mary M. Goebel, land in Warren tp. $200. Marvin T. Case to Jessie D. Case, lot in Greencastle, $1. Ida May Kinsley to Clara Heavins, lot in Greencastle, $2010. Frances E. Bell to Dode Bell etux, 20 acres in Jackson tp. $1. Virginia Black to C. H. Barnaby, 83 acres in Greencastle tp., $4000. Ebenezer Gurnett to Goldie Kennedy land in Cloverdale tp. $950. S. R. Pursell to C. A. Keck, 25 acres in Jackson tp. $1350. Wm. Perkins to Morton Telephone Co., land in Clinton tp. $1. Mary A. Evans to Central Trust Co., lot in Greencastle $36.25. J. E. Roseberry to Central Trust Co.

in 1914.’’ General

member of the Nollet commission in-! vestigating military conditions in the reich, declared today in an interview with the United Press. “To abandon Allied control of j Germany would be a deadly imprudence,” the French commander continued. Fortunately the allies have understood this. We have undenipble proofs that Germany is secretly organizing for revenge. She is Instructing officers. She has troops more numerous than the Versailles treaty permits. She is furnishing them with the most modern and complete armaments, rifles, machine guns, cannon and plenty of ammu-

nition.

The reiohswehr is the frame of 21 German army corps. A whistle ■would call all ex-soldiers to join existing companies, which are deliberately wearing the numbers of regiments of th old imperial army.

Bourgeois, a pure vegetable ingredients. S. S. S. is

sold at all good drug stores. The large size bottle is more

economical.

' G O A/.tkes You Feel Yourself Again

TWO KILLED IN EXPLOSION

QUINCY, 111., Feb. 29.—Two men were killed and eight injured, two seriously, when a boiler exploded at the plant of the North Star Egg

Case company here today.

The plant is the smaller of two paper mills here. It employs about 200 men. Too much ifleam in a

boiler caused

FOLEY’S HONEY-TAR ESTABLISHED 1875 No Opiates, Ingredients printed on Wrapper INSIST UPON FOLEY*S R. P. MUI LINS. DU'JGGiBT.

The ladies of the Catholic church

market Saturday at the

2t

lots in Greencastle $1

Nona W. Sinclair to Clyde C. Gray, beijc Ve

lot in < loverdale, $2500. J pj re out a ft er th e exlosion Fred Lancaster to Citizens Trust had caus!ed $10 o.000 damage.

Co., land in Greencastle tp., $1. C. J. Ferrand to W. G. Hammond,

lots in Fillmore $75

PREVENTS INFECTION

The greatest discovery in flesh healing is the marvelous Borozone, a preparation that comes in liquid and powder fonn. It is a combination treatment that nut

the exlposion, officials I only purities the wound of germs that

| cause infection but it heals the flesh witn extraordinary speed. Bad wounds or cuts which take weeks to heal with the ordinary liniments mend quickly under the powerful influence of tnis wonderful remedy. Price (liquid) 30c, 60cand $1.20.

Powder 30c and 60c. Sold by Sold by Owl Drug Stor*

FOR RENT—Two rooms furnished or unfurnished. Call 642-Y. 29-2t