The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 July 1932 — Page 3

THE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE. INDIANA, FRIDAY. JULY ii, 1932.

CLASSIFIED ADS CP —For Sale— f( )R SA LE—TR AN SI*A R ENT

Floral Shop- It. Rummage sale at the couithouse Satunlay. 7-2t

LEAGUE STANni\G>

American Association

Globe Fliers Forced Down In Russia

FOR SA Phone It 10.

FOR SALE—Upright piano in perfect condition. $25 if taken at once. \ Call Banner. 8*2t

W.

L.

Pet

Minneapolis

46

34

575 1

| Indianan.lw

.... 47

36

.566

| ColumbiTT’^’

46

38

.544 I

Kansas City ......

43

39

.526

i Milwaukee

... 41

37

.526

, Toledo

42

42

.500

>

Louisville

. . . . 32

45

■416

St. Paul

.... 26

52

.333

American

League

/ §

W.

L.

Pet. •

/ ■

New Yolk

.... 50

42

1 .(>76 1

■ Detroit

42

29

.592

; Philadelphia

14

32

.579 |

\

Cleveland

. . . . 41

34

.5471

\

j Washington

40

36

.526

1 St. Louis

.... 37

36

.507

45 59

sistant cabbage, pimento, hardy Chicago 27 floweis. O. M. O’Hair. Phone 157. Boston 14

g-lp 1 National League

-S** ! W. L. FOR SALE—Household goods and pjtt s | )Ur> rh 40 no auto. Rear of 1503 north Jackson. 8-Ht i ('^icago 39 34 FOR SALE—Boston bull pups. In- Boston 40 quire at Rudolph Volderauer, Fill- : Philadelphia 159 more, Iml. »-3p' * ^ 3 . 6 . • i Brooklyn 3(i FOR SALE—Green beans. I. E. N ',. w York 38 Stone. Phone Rural 154. 7-2t Cincinnati 3d

FOR SALE—Red raspberries, large fineHmproved variety, suitable for table use and all kinds of preserving. Callf285. R. A. Ogg. 29-tf. FOR SALE—While they last. Baby chicks and stuitel chicks, consisting of a limited number of barred rocks, white rocks, white wyandottes, buff Orphington and R. Reds. Records Hatchery, 19 east Franklin street. Greeneastle, Ind. 22-tf FOR SALE: Ri|>e peaches, transparent apples, red raspberries and Vegetables. McCullough Orchard.

C-2ts.

the courthouse

7-2t

Phone R-95.

Rinimage sale at

Saturday.

-For Rent—

FOR RENT—Modern six room hou.e with 5 1 .' acies ,ground. Well located. Phone 538 L. 7-2t

.375 j .192 Pet. .571 .534 I .533 j .494 j .493 I .480 ' 471 .434 (

Jammed ctintrols of th< ii* “( eiUm f Pn uress*’ ifsultrd in a er-u*kup for JimmieMattern (loft) and Bemott -Griffin I . S. Army fliers, ii their attempt to Itiwer the ‘round-the-world record ol le,-> tl an t days made by Wiley Post and Harold (iatty la-t year. 'I heir plane was wreaked* hut tin* two aviators escaped with only slight injuries. 1 hey planned ti, cor tinue by train to Moscow today. The imap sh.iws the route they intended to follow.

j ART KAUBLE’S Meat Market 13 \\ I - I I RVNELIN north side ok the square PHONE 24 I 10 I- 1>EL1YI HI 8:30 11:00 M. - I :30 P. M.

FOLKS, HERE’S A TIE For the best in meats at depression prices combined with efficient and courteous service you can’t pro wrong- at Kauble’s. Here’s just a few of our weekend bargains: 4 Lbs. Pure Clinton Lard, 25c* oO Lb. Can Clinton Lard $3.10 3 Lbs. Short Ribs for Boiling, 25c* Pork Chops, Lb. ] Jt* Ihirk Steak, lb. ]2c* Boiling Beef, 4 lbs. 25c—Franks, Lb. . . 9c 2 Lbs. Clinton Bacon. 25(* 12 piece, H lb. average, lb, ]()c

Yesterday’s Results

American Association Indianapolis, li; Kansas City, 1. Toledo, 4; Minneapolis, 3. St. Paid. 11; Columbus, 4. Milwaukee, 5-8; Louisville, 3-2.

American League St. Louis. 8: Boston, 2. Chicago. 13-3; Philadelphia, 3-9. Detroit, 8; New York, 5. Cleveland. 3-4; Washington, 2-3. National League New York, 4; Pittsburgh, 3. Chicago. 7: Philadelphia, 0 Boston, 6; St. Louis, 4

FOR RENT—My home at 108 Taylor PI i e. Seven rooms, three bedrooms, sun parlor, and modern in | yreiy way. Garage connected v

basement S. R. Rariden.

vith !

g —Wanted— WANTED A second hand piano. See or call Russell O’Haver. Morton. S 8-2p

SEMI-MAKING (cutting and fitting) or nuking garments. Altering aird remodeling. Miss Mildred A. Long, 611 S. Locust Street. Telephone 47>- ') 6 2p

MONEY to use

in your t)U5inC33

MONIES

AT THE GRANADA Divorce, being one of the most popular of America’s topics of conversation, is a mine of dramatic material for motion picture plot Its effects, especially on the innocent victims, serve as the motivation of “The Woman In Room 13” Eli so Landi’s latest Fox drama, at the Granada Theatre Saturday. Based on the famous play of the same name, the picture relates the experiences of a young wife who divorces a philandering husband to search for happiness with a new mate. The venture is satisfactory in every way until the jealous, revengeful ex-husband plots to prove her un-

faithful. Henry Kim directed the picture which is said to give Miss l.andi her best sere n p ie. The popular star is supported b> in ohie cast which include- Ralph Bellamy, Neil Hamilton, Myrna l.o. aid Gilbert Roland. Stitch \nd ( hatter flub Has Meeting The Stitch ai d Chatter -I H club met at the high school gymnasium Thursday afternoon to work on proieets. Afterwards the memln rs enjoyd a piogram of gan - • loci Je sup, south Jackson street, vie arrested Thursda. evening by i it\ Officr Kn-coe Scott on a charge 0, operating a tiuck with improper 1. cen.-e plates. He wn lined $5 and n ' . amounting to >1 ■ when lie i leaded guilty to the charge.

City firemen made a lun to the home of Wilbur S. Donm r. 31)5 South Vine street, about (5:30 o’clock Thursday evening when an awning on the east si le of the r< uden. e caught fire from an unknown cau e. A g.u n host' had le on used to practically e\-tingui-h the blaze when the firemen arrived.

Surprise Party On Walter Gardner Walter Gardner was pie i eatly surpri-ed Thursday night July 7th, when a group of friends gathered at hi- home < n N Madison street in honor of his 31st birthd ly. Those pro - ent were: Mis Dan Gardner, Mrs. Fisher Austin and children, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Oneal and children, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Davis and son, Cecil Robertson, David Barr, .E t lio

sick. Mary ami Francis Robertson and Lorraine Davis. The guests departed at a late hour wishing Mr. Gardner many m u - happy birthdays

STOK l(,E ( OMTANY HEAD IT K\> lo (tOATS IN SLUMP ( I EVE:LAND, «UP)—If times get any worse, Frink J. Hawkins, presi d nt of a lo al transfer and storage c; mpany, w ill add a few more goats to his herd and let the test of the world go by. He believes that goats will he brought into their rightful prominence by the depre-s-J. n According to his i wn story, he Gr-t got a couple of goals so that he could putter around and care for them t > get his min i

But now he is Ice his living to the seiious

“my hu iness is businesses are

off business worries, convince I they w ill problem if it gets

stage.

"So fur.” he said, all right, but big

crashing all over the (.untry. and some day it may be nn turn. If this happens I’ll take m\ goats and my family and repair to a little Country

place I own.

“It ( osts me just $3 a year to keep a goat and if I had 11 buy everything they eat, it would cost me only $6 a

year per goat.

"These tw female goat-' keep me in all the milk I can use. A goat give- a gallon of milk a day, and it's thick in drieli.”

■BANNER (T \SSIIT1 DS PAY"

jS —Lost W I.OST: Purse containing application sheet, key, change- See Mildred Cravei • ,uy Illinois street. <i 2p. —M iscellaneous— ICL CREAM Supper at Fillmore M. E. Church, July 8. Home made Ice Cream and Cake. Every one invited. 6 2t.

FOR EXPANSION— for paying off notes, purchasing merchandise or equipment for cash, and numerous other business purposes—-we loan money in any reasonable amount. Terms are conveniently and quickly arranged. Interest rates are so low that it Is profitable to borrow hers to speed business progress. The American Security Co, Phone 98 11—E. V'^shington St The Find National Bank Building

DANCE at Banner Club Wednesday and Saturday nights. Admission 10 cents. fi-2p.

PERMANENTS — Three, six, ten dollais. Easy method. No burned hair or heads! One operator gives entire wave. Three years in Greencastle. Phone 701-L. Mrs. I). M Godfrey. 1001 South Indiana street. 8-lt

I Mil XNAI’OI.IS LIVESTOCK Hogs 6,500; holdovers 288; lights 5 cents,up; others steady underweights 10 ( up; 100 to 210 lbs.. $5.20 to $5.30; 210 to 235 lbs., $5.05 to $5-15; 235 to 275 ihs., $4.95 to $5.00; 275 to 325 lbs., $4.85 to $4.90; 326 lbs. up, $4 75 to *4.80: 140 to 160 lbs. $6.00 :o $5.10; 100 to 140 Ihs.. $4.75 to $490; packing sows $3.75 to $4.50. jHCattle 500; calves 500; mostly iten ly; two loads weighty steers $8.50; other supplies odds and ends of iml finite value; some heifers $425 to $5.75; better kinds scarce but -aleafcle to $7.00 and above; beef cows $1 75 to $4; odd head $4.25 to $4 50; low cutters and cutters $1.25 to $2.50; v*als 25c up to $6.00 down. BSlieep 1,500; lambs strong; ewes an i wethers largely $7.50; small lot $7.75; bucks out at $1 discount; thiowouts down to $4.00. ■Claude Frank, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Flank of Morton, who was injure I in a truck collision on the Naticnal road near Brazil Tuesday, has bet'ii removed to his home in Indinnapolii from the Clay county hospital. It was said his injuries were not seriou , he having suffered only cuts and bruises.

BINKLEY S SERVICE STATION Phillips 66 Gas and Oil ' TRY A TANK * MAKE US B< < III GLAD. Airport Hoad Near 43

>om i o» Mn.iut r'* «ki.k of IIRII. I>I % IF.

rop

decree to me tlirceted from t lie clerk of the Futnam Circuit Court of Putmini County, Indiana, in a cause wherein tin* State of Indiana ex-rot William \ Cooper, \nditnr of Pufnalif County, Indiana, is plaintiff and. «Vis \j. Mary, el al. ar* defendants, use No. LID:’.!!, repairing nm to make the sum of $3X.t.0O with interest on said decree from date Of judgment and the ‘•oHts of this action, I will expose at public Male to th” highest Bidder on Saturday July 30, r.'32, between the hours of ten o'clock A. AL. and four

outs of this action

tiJe to the

illy 30. ID. r ]2 t bet

•n o'clock A AL, and

o clock P. AL of said flat** at the door of the Court House in (I reenenst le, Putnam County. Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven Nears of the following described real estate, situated in Putnam County in

the State of Indiana, to-vvit:

All that part of the southeast quarter

uith

twenty-eight <2N), township fourteen (Mi, iiorlh. range five (a) west, which lies north of t he relocn t ion of the

of tlie southwest quarter of section

t ON l ve

rth of I he relocation of the right of way of the Cleveland, Cincinnati. Chicago, and St. Louis Railway Company road, supposed to contnkn thirty-three (33) acres, more or less. Also a right of way on the west side of the ten acre tract of land owned In 1911, by J. Bay singer that joins the

(33> acres a hove de-

scribed.

If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree. Interests and costs, I will at

Mary

t hirty-t hi ee

the same time and place expose to

public sale tin* fee simple above described real

title of said estate, or so

much thereof as may he sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Sail! sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. Witness my hand this the 27th day

of Jim *. 1932. ALVA BRYAN

Sheriff of Putnam County John IT. James, Attorney for Plaintiff. l-3t

“ The Headlines screamed ‘SHAMGHAI’ I re H

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF RECKIN'KR Notice is hereby given that the un-der-igned has been appointed by the Circuit Court of Putnam County, Indiana, Receiver of Moore & CookShoes located at No. 10 West V ashin gt on street, Greencastle, Indiana, and of all the assets, credits, ights and effect of said firm, and '.hat I have duly qualified as such re eiver. Creditors are notified to file their claims, duly verified, with said receiver, within thiity days, for consideration and participation in the' assets thereof. Dated July I. 1932. Frank J. Cannon, Receiver. Charles McGaughey, Attorney l-2t

TTELLO EVERYBODY i ! 1 Floyd Gibbons speaking. I’m just back from China. Fieri/ war there. Messed around with it ft r four months, from Manchurian madness to Shanghai slaughter. They killed six thousand over the-e. That's the best estimate I can give 1 . They wounded twenty thousand more. Men. Women and children. Mowed them dove. Frightful. But wail. What did I find out when I ge t back? tUgiU thousand had been killed. .V quarter of a million injured. Right here i i America. During the months 1 was gone. Jn automobile accidents! This happened to my own kind. Men, women and children. No screaming headlines. No war correspondents. Just death Maiming. Suffering. Just too common to be news. This burned me up. Seeing women and children killed in China made me realize the awfulness of it here. I stopped in Akron. There I found a 1 ire manufacturer doing something about it. Goodrich. Goodric h was crusading for doty. Goodrich was developing more safety in tires. You know, your tires are a sort of endian belt between your car imd the road.

They carry the weight. They transmit the power. They do the braking. They do the steering. No matter what kind of motor—brakes —steering gear you’ve got, it's up to the tires! You send a ear weighing maybe 2 ‘.ons along at 50 miles an hour, and u few S'/iiori inches of rubber are your sole connection with the world- and safety. That’s worth thinking about. I certainly thought about it, when they showed me what they’d done at Goodrich. They've got a new tire. They worked three years to develop it. They call it the SAFETY Silvertown. They say it’s the safest tire ever built. They convinced me. I can’t go into the details of their marvelous test machines their manufacturing processes — their Silver Fleet that has covered 50 million miles testing tires Hut I’ll give you the climax. I saw them drive a car on Safety Silvertowns around a sharp, wedge-shaped corner. The pavement was asphalt, and wet. The car went around that corner at 12 miles an hour. It leaned so, I thought it was going over. Isawpuffsof steam come out from under those Safety Silvertowrm as they clutched that wet, glassy pavement. YET THEY DIDN'T SKID AN INCH.

7HEM A/on ED DOWS ,n Shanghai, flenly had. that stuff. HVir at its U'orst. Hut the greatest shock came when / got ick Found haii many had been kitledhere. Inpeu* etutAnieriea'

That car held its path like it was tied to it running on rails. That's SAFETY ! \Yith thousands injured in skidding accidents every year, I want to say that Goodrich has done something HIG SENSATIONAL. They told me out there in Akron that 67' , of the cars now on the road have at least one tire that invites disaster. Yet their new Safety Silvertown can be houghl for a price that astonished me. It doesn't cost one cent more than any standartl tire. Peace negotiations stopped the killing in Shanghai. Goodrich engineers have at last put something into a tire that will reduce the highway slaughter. It's the price of safety on the rood. I’m for stopping the HIGHWAY SLAUGHTER. I'm for Safety Silvertowna the tires which have scooted the scare out of the skid!

►(SK *3.oo to qa.oo a Set Allowed for )hr Old Th en on your i ar on puri hane of four NEW GOODRICH SAFETY SILVERTOWNS

'I o help cut down the toll of autidcntK io get the “Death Tlre»'’ off the hifthwaya—wc oflhr Nen*»atlonal irade-io allowant’es for your old, unsafe tirei* on gi Kdft i\ '.titi t i iwns

y&p

Pm for this League, too! Here’s something: The Silvertown Sufstjr I «*aUu*‘ It Aivett ms drlvlngfuit * to lullow —an emblem for my tar I Joined up! Ao.jr (xMxirichUsaUi wilL-tuoll yuu,tUe> ttllcus.

HARTMAN & HIRT

Corner Yine& Franklin Streets

Phone 775

Goodrich Sable/ Silvertown M * Coerrittat. Thsli.l. guatm (.obmbv