The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 March 1932 — Page 3

S ** ■»» ... i, . . THL DAIKY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INTDIANA, MONDAY, MA'ECH 14,1932

^FIED ads work did not 3 'START MAR. ION

STEVENSON DAM

to jrton.no,

01. »'' ,ns ,,p

ir uwJ

^ NA ' n ° s \ N Phone 15 lashinir"'''

listened in vain for the rinut of the woodsman’s ax felling the thousands of trees which must l>e remove;! from the hasin and hill sides before t ie 150 feet head of water is amassed by the great dam to be. W e listened in vain for the clatter and sputter of the steam shovel, the clang of ham-

BRAZIL TIMES REPRESENT.*. , M ,1 lhp " " 1 , nam ' TIVES PAIL TO FIND ANY NEW lMS toad all was silent. " ' V ° m0n '

Not a soul thing astir.

ACTIVITIES

for more than two months, but even in sight not a that’s something.

Itf—Well improved, 1 [ ,. from town. Price 1 Box X, Banner

12-2t

Inquire

I k Coal, |3.60, ton; J $3.00 mine tV $2.r-n. Phone 803 - ™

8-ot,

[ » chem P'

Rnesen.

Phone R-41.

14 It

L p._ Fordson tractor, I s . A-l condition, $150. Bainbridge, R. 1. 14-2p.

Foshay was sent to prison as the re- r ership was dissolved,

suit of the crash of his financial af- * findfatrs at Mmneapohs, Mmn. ^ farmer P s v ^ ue the lands cca isider-

Did we say ther? were no new signs ably more than the assessors do when

of activities at Hoosier Highland' they put it down at $0 to $13 ^ 1 acre. Well, that is not exactly true. At the ’| i. figure will probably he cut in side of the Cagle grist mill is a large ), a |f py nPW rpa l estate assess-

pile of surveyor’s stake^ ready for ment, it was reported. business. But these have been there '

None of the cottage owners . as far l>e learned, has been af* oroach-

To get the “low down on what is u "’ ; * Ihe range of towering As you follow Mill creek upstre im ' ' '■ n in ,i_, an |being done toward the erection of tho on 0 iil' e r side of Mill creek unri through the precincts of Hoosier 1 o " inoper les wou great power dam which the Americao :llon F the various gullies forking from Highlands the unitiated is surpri el ! 0 - ,,atpr . Utilities Development Corporation t, !' , rivor bottoms, thickly siudded at the large number of splendid cot The dam site is ideal and there are proposes to build on Mill Creek ai u . l,h tinl, ’ or frowning outcrop- tages roosting on the cliffs and hill f PWt if an y ot h er places in the nndHoosier*Highlands, representative'. 1 ' ' o tide » the soutl ol Mill cret , .. A , hj^f, bluffs are so dose the Brazil Times made a trip to that ! '' ’ r ; 11 have been built in n „ v, gida of the tiver,

"‘th faint tou-hes of green from last few years. There must be alnm-t w jth a ijmesioru* rock hank to Ibuild 1 'ms, moss and early spring wild a hundred of these homes for the sum- on y.fl,>wer< ' n' p '- sojourners of Hoosier Highlands Mra Cagle says that hun dreds oC Proceeding down -tream in „ north- and practically all of them are well. visitors ()riw in t(( lo( , k over t he , ,it< westerli direction at a point about equipped, having beds or cots, lino- an() Kot snmp conct . ptiort of what ‘.he :i< '° • v;iH t,(,|nw th '' ( a »> p '"'ll we leum and rugg on the floor, tables and propoRpd takP) extl ndin g from t h ? came ,t ros, the site of the proposed comfortable chairs, fireplaces, heat- ( , am snut)l of Manhattan, to Cat4 - dam On tho other side of the river ing stoves and co.,k stoves and gaso- raot an(1 n eVorp nn tkp , south, tl e at tlii point, the lowering hills are line stoves. Many have kitchen sinks, va|]ey south of n ovpr ,4 a le on tl e me | by a path which traversed ice boxes and other house keeping ap n ' olt h hacking water pitot Qui« -y river bank to -heir pliances. Most of them have beauu nmj a]most fn tho HeTulrlcks line ’on

20 foot path from fied their slanting door yards with L^ p p!)st

j Block Coal, I', imi, ; Frazier & -:!9-\ 1- P i Quality baby

I See our

our prices before or-

teed 1 ui-

. Monday and Thurs-

uppliea.

„. IV 111 east Franklin

\ 852.

(ireencastle.

Jp _B( t Brazil top vein B g, Phone tilling Station. 14-5ts.

Six-hole, eafct iron oir, coal or wood, $17. |Fi, store Plione 134. 14-2t —Choice Poland China [saai ' Hammond. l2-2ts.

on hand; Taking spe- ■ nnphell and i!i Phone | ",. '1,1. Mar. 13t

Complete set tug I Hr . good conk.i.it Mi Meridian. | !2-2p.

rur Rent—

sic., inp rooms, close It.

I .*,! de of double I l ast Han I e KIT ]2-3ts.

Modern sleeping I of -quaro, treet. Phone 62. [ !2-2ts.

- Dffice rooms, formhy Dr. (J. W. Bence, at licet. Dr. 194. 3-tf.

Vanled—

to 100 feet old on< 2IH-Y. I Ip.

MANGUS or Phone |g'ii, d hauling. Also ;:; -75 per ton. 14-3p.

^ fe calves, 1 to 2 _ M ick, ('nates

K

m- —.

l4-3p.

'a onl address of PI hi nr.,, detailed in1°^ "Id Bainbridge ^ Danvilte, ind-

12-3ts.

garden plot or [I'td phase list with 27-1 It

•’ameo brooch, luitii, - Reward. Phone 14-lp.

vllaiienus-

5 GENERATIONS AT REUNION CLEARFIELD, Pa. (UP)—Five Venerations were represented at a reunion of the Lee family a t their farm homestead at Utahville, near here. Mrs. Rebecca Lee, 87, was the oldest of the group. Others included her daughter, her grand-daughter, her great-granddaughter, and a great-great-grandson, the latter just one

year old. ia

1 TULIP FESTIVAL MAY 18 I®

HOLLAND, Mich. <PP)—The an ||

nnal tulip fistival, drawing immen e crowds from Western Michigan, N< r-

thern Indiana and Chicago

held May 13 to 20.

will bo

EJMBIS.cVSTinicUSIHSfiyS’'''■ ''TO •' _ i' .3!3I

A B ARG UN INu (Juick Sh It* Onr Mr. I !»m(k

= 1

Model De.'noiistp '

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locality recently. To those who arc looking forward to the job of helping build the great Stevenson dam, we would say, “hibernate a little longer: there’s nothing doing just now.” Rolling down the long winding hill leading into the picturesque hasin of Mill creek known as Hoosier High lauds — formerly Blackhawk — the

newspaper men found all quiet and them from the serene. For 14 or 15 miles we had n -t, forming

traveled past field after field where u i, h the tic had been fcllci This rock gardens and clumps of forms, farmers were plowing with horse marks the spot where the pi posed making it all very home-like. But teams and tractors, turning the soil Steven on dam i- to lie built to a there is one thing which impre

over in preparation for another corn height of 155 feet, over 1,00(1 feet in you. Those long, shaky flights nf ‘ Mi s Mary Agnes Miller, court'y 1 crop. Down there in the Mill creek length. But there is nothing new in tair leading up to those human nurse, is in the Putnam county Kos.

ADDITIONAL I.0CAI*S

bottoms, however, there was nothing hut silence and inaction except for the music of the waters of Mill creek as they poured over the small dam at the Cagle grist mill in a steady sheet, and the twitter of the birds as thev busied themselves with their preparations for spring homemaking. \Yi

this. The stump which <l"t the nar- roosts are an effective argument in pital for treatment. She is suffering

row open strip on the hill show no favor of prohibition, of influenza. fresh signs of the woodsman’s craft, j It was learned that from the Clo

Summer’s burr ing sun and -torms verdale land office the development Mr . N. C- Alspaugh, 401 AVes|. of two winters have left their mark corporation has procured hundred" of Franklin street has returned from St.J on these stump- T <• the path of the options, hut the only actual cash paid l.nui where she has been the guest 1 hig dam is the work of the Foshay out was for the Cagle mill, which was of her daughter. Mrs. Charles Moore]

For Spring House Cleaning

I I !.:!

i-<lnipped £]

I A ? s c«»r is f] | M ~, rt " il A Synehroniesh I ran .mission, S1, *1 Hire Nveels, fender wells,

-Kink rack,

eatci heat- pi

M ,rt al I i re ( n\ crs.

1 ..link. 11 a I tees hot e an i neai- p| ft. ( igar lighter, lioalde acting 17j

9

Ilydraulic Shock ahsorberi-

4<>ii can tni\ iliin foi tin price jfl of live ^mallei iniMlel with

pi

NO KOI I PM 1 \ I If you will do "i before tlarch pi

HHh. Pt.'i;'.

This car lists been driven only |,] by J P, \in- i, h and will demonstr.ater by him sit any time or plsice. to your own sat ■"faction relephniK u-. 273 for

an appoint menf.

promoters whose hnhble hurst when sold recently at auction when a part and Mr. Moore, the past two weeks.

For Sale Bv

WOMEN’S FOREIGN MISSIONARY SOCIETY GREEN! ASTI R METHODIST CHURf If Telephone orders to No. 1418. will be promptly delivered.

Tl’r MoIVli-

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■ Wdl patrons please 1 h«en matUd to II to pay accounts. ">gc Indiana Assog' ' 1 1 "i.alinn. tf ''iiiical wncements ■himi f f I'"Puhlican candiT ff ' I’dlnam County] f 1 ''' 1 a day, May 2rd. J ' MipreclaUd. J '• K ITORNEY l' la '«N Republican canr' aiforney, Putt mar :' election, TtiosT°" r ' will he ap-

| S,0NF 'R. 2ND BIST, commissioner ' of Putnam the Democratic ri » Tuesday \fn,, o

THfY’RI MILDER • • THIY’Ri etJRi • • THEY <2 19)2. Its*irr * Mrui T«i.(cc© Co. .. . .

TASTE BETTER

£ Tltcro’s only one thing that will rha«e a inornino "roiirli quicker than a warm shower. And that’s a cold one. With a Chesferfitdd to follow. And even if you‘re rushed ... there's time to appreciate Cheaterficld’s better ta<te.

^ One man likes his coffee weak. Another likes it strong. But it's dollars to doughnuts hull) want mild cigarettes. And that means Chesterfields. They gel von started on the rigid fool. They’re good anywhere. Anytime.

£ And later... in the office when the phones begin to buzz and the big boss begins to shout...put Chesterfield on the job. Ii starts out cool... stays cool... and k< < |* you cool in a hot spot till the final whistle blows.

% It’s going to he a hig evening. So change ygur clothes and step out. And don't forget your Chesterfields. You’ll need them. And if it's mixed company you'll want to take ait extra pack. Their purity is their password . . . wherever people are particular

£ Chesterfield has never faded to make i s contract. It bills a grand slam for inildnr s and better taste . . . and comes through wiih all the honors every time . . . Because every shred of ( hesterfield leaf is carefully select’d . . . and by men who "k now.”

0 One m ire Chesterfield and you can r: il it a day. And notice... the last one tastes just as good a- the first. That’s no accident. Tha ’s the sum and substance of Chesterfield’s popularity. . . told in two words , . ."They Satisfy.”

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