The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 August 1932 — Page 3
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THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 13,1932.
CLASSIFIED ADS
—For Sale—
rOft SALE—Green ^uire plum-, 30 fF+m • gallon. Strain Orchard. Phone
FOR SALE: Canning peaches, hi* tMhlte Champions an 1 early Elbertas, Ckpps Favorite pear. Buchheit
OBehard Phone R 151.
pgsg—-—
J0® ^SAl.E —Gate leg extension 4Wnc table and 8 chairs. Mahogany flaiah. Apply to J. P- Allen, 410 , -.‘ •art Walnut. 9-13
For Auction sales Of all kinds see or call me, O. J. Rector, AUCTIONEER. Greene astle.
FOR SALE: Rissler’s home-grown ;T\co and one-half miles south aant Gardens. They’re jniahty
12-2p j
*UK
£
FOR h •. 1 ill I n-i
11(1 .llhroFshi.e Rams. Prices reasonable,
john W Day, Fillmore, Ind.
'r, fOR SALE A five ivoin house
from Elevatoi j,, Bain- ’. Shea. l3-6p. ALE—Silvertone phonograph
ibii.et, 69 tecords, $5.95. Cook’s
Store. Phone 124 13-2t
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT
OF ESTATE
Notice is hereby given to the Creditor-. Heirs and Legatees of William 12-tf | B. Bridges, deceased to appear in the Putnam Circuit Court, held at Greencastle. Indiana, on the jk.h d a y 0 f September 1932. and shew cause, if any, why the Final Settlement with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heir.- are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distribu-
tive shares.
Witness, the Clerk 0 f said Court, this 12th day of August, 19.32. , Cause No. 7.383. W. M. Sutherlin, Attorney. John W. Herod, Clerk Putnam Cir-! cult Court. 13.2*.
Photos, 50c. For Canimack Studio.
liiuit-10-tf
IC SALE—Pure bred Duioc togs; bred sows; spring giltCataloges mailed on re-
iDi . Earl Fenee, Danville, Ind. ■ l2-2p
^l--For Rent--
. FOR RENT—West half of double, 410 east Walnut -treet. Five rooms and bath, neakfust nook and sleeping porch- All newly decorated. Gas stove ano electric refiigeration. J. P. Allen, 410'i; east Walnut stieet. 13 U
NOTH E To I AXP A VERS OF JEFFERSON T()W NSHIP, pi I N \M COUNTY. INDIANA. OF AD-
DITIONAL APPROPRIA I IONS FOR YEAR 1932
Notice is hereby given to the taxpayers of Jefferson Township, Putnam County, Indiana, that in Special Meeting, on August 3 1, 1932, the Advisory Board of Jefferson Township considered and determined that an emergency exists for the making of additional appropriations for the curlent year, 1932, for the expenditure of more money than was appropriated in the annual published budget. Therefore, notice is hereby given that the Advisers Board of said township wjll meet in Regular Session, on September fith, 1932, at 7:30 o’clock. P ..M., at the offic" of the Trustee of said Township, to determine and ap propriate the following sums and for the following purposes and from the following funds, being additional ap-
propt iatmn.s 1to-wit:
FOB
RENT—Modern Spring avenue. [all 234, RENT: Modern
: miJ
\ J
fts Oi e 2-room and kitehen-3-room and kitedtenette. 702 kinary street . i2‘2t RENT: Modern six room tit Walnut -treet, $30 per E. Robbins. Phone 418 or 527-tf. ll- NT Very cozy modern 4Bnished ap irtmc t, dose in, [■age Lockridge apartments, Walnut street. H-3ts
for the current
19:
Item 8 Township Fund, for
care of cemeteries
Item 30 Special School Fund,
for teachers’ institute
I Item 33 Special School Fund, furnished j shed rent and repair of
five room For infor-
12-13-2t
year
$40.00 $15.00
Wanted
TED Reliable man or womepresent food products comj Green, .istle. Add res- Box K, I 13 IP
IN' wants work Experienced. Phom
kle, Ind.
in small t> on 77.
11 2p.
bus bodies $75.00 Unless objections are made by ten or more taxpayers, other than those who pay poll tax only, in the manner prescribed by law, the said Advisi rv Board, pursuant to this notice, will take action and wall proceed and order eaeh and all of the above named items appropriated for the use* and purposes herein named by a resolution or! ordinance to be duly adopted by said Advisory Board and to he entered of
record.
Dated this August 4th, 1932.
Attest:
B. C. COX, Township Trustee. Melvin MoCammack, AIle rt Wallace and Leland J. Clark, Advisory Board of Jeffer.-on Township, Putnam County. Indiana. fi'2t.
The appointment of Frank C Walker (above) as treasurer of the Democratic National Committee has met with general approval in party circles. Mr. Walker, a native of Montana and rt ident of New York, is a lawyer. He will direct the campaign for funds for the Democratic national drive. CANNES COLLEGE OPENS
CANNES (I P) The International College of Cannes was inaugurated here recently in the presence of gov ernment and university officials. The mayor of Cannes, Dr. Gazagnaire. presided, and an explanation of the aims of the new college was made. There will he preparatory, middle and superior courses, complemented by lectures on French literature comparative literature, hi-toiy and civiliza tion and the history of art. Certificates as well as diplomawill be issued under the seal of the Universit,. of Marseilles. At present there are students from almost al’ nations including several front
America.
LEAGUE STANDINGS
National League
W.
L
Pet
Chicago
69
48
.551
Pittsbuigh . .
Ik)
50
.545
54
.518
Boston
58
55
.513
Philadelphia
58
57
.504
St. Louis . . .
. . 53
56
.484
New Y'ork
50
57
467
Cincinnati . .
48
67
-417
American 1 ague
W.
L.
Pet.
New York ..
74
35
.682
Philadelphia
45
.694
Cleveland . .
67
45
696
Washington
61
49
>
Detroit
57
51
.528
St. Louis ..
49
60
.450
Chicago ....
37
70
.340
Boston
2?
82
.248
When Libby Faced Court Afcer Surrender
American Asm nation
W.
L.
Minneapolis ..
....... 70
49
Indianapolis .
53
Columbus .. . .
70
54
Kansas City
. 63
57
Toledo
62
61
Milwaukee . . .
57
63
1 Louisville . . .
48
71
Peal ....
..... . 44
75
Y ESI ERI)AY’S Rl M
LTS
National league
Brooklyn, 1;
New Y ork, 0.
Philadelphia,
8; B- ton,
1.
Only games
scheduled.
American League
Boston, 2: Philadelphia.
.
Pet. .588 .566 .566 .525 .504 .475 403 0
Enshrouded in her heavy, blackYwidow’s Weeds, T.ibby worth, N./c. Libby’s father, Alfred C. Holman, is
Holman Reynolds, handkerchief yt° face, weeps softly as her attorney, Benet Polikoff, /Heads for the ‘‘torch
singer’s” release on bail after heitsurrender at Went-
in, .-\111ru v». iidimaii, is
seated be tide her holding her hand Attorney Polikotf won kis plea and Smith Reynold’s widow was re-
leased on ff25.000 bad pending trial in October.
BANNER CL \SSIFIED ADS PAY
VI’ I HE GR \ NADA SI NDAH \ \ D MONDAY
NOTICE OP l l\\l SETTLEMENT
OF ESTATE
Notice is hereby given to the Cred »* . Unit'd I * nlEMtlMro /if*
itois. Heirs and Riley, dec eased.
I Bii I
I il
thill
egatees of
appear in the
Putnam Circuit Court, held at Green
KD—General housework by castle, Indiana, on the 26th day of
September, 19.32. and show tause, if nny, why the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not he approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive
their distributive shares.
Witness, th<f Clerk of said Court,
ihi- 5th day of August, 19.32.
Cause No. 7424
JOHN W. HERUD. Clerk Putnam Circuit Court. 6-2t.
fed young lady. Address Box ki Banner. l2-2p ilisuellaneous— LAY CHICKEN DINNERS
|g. lar meals, 35c. ' all 715-Y fication-. Vermilion’s. 12-2])
I
rebile owners, before you cer insurance, see Roy Hillis |stle. Finest Clark, Fillmorein our rates. 9-12-p. IT DATA CONCERNING, >1 VN \ Pitl VIO INDUSTRY
1
■ 1 ' l V
Indiana produces only 37 |>er {its an ual consumption of |K>one of the interesting facts 1 a recent publication of the ral experiment station of University. Working with the of chain store buyers, Kay »rd and Harry M. Cleaver of oitment of horticulture at 1,, were able to procure a great ▼atnue 1 of accurate and interesting dreba Which has been edited ami prepneed in bulletin form for general
ion.
Ninety .me per cent of the Indiana PBtnto-growers considered potatoes •• W Itofitable crop, anil only 1,3 per
any difficulty in disposing produce It was also found
• pro! H-d
NOTKE To |\\P AYERS OF WARREN TOWNSHIP ON ROAD BOND ISSUE In the Matter of the petition of Raymond Scobvc. et #1. /or the improvemert of a public highway in Warren Township, Putnam County,
Itufiaha.
Notice is hereby given to the tax payers ixf Warren Township, Putnam County, Indiana, that the iRoanl of Commissioners of the County of Put nam, of said County and State, at theii regular Augu-I Term, 1932, the same being the sixth day of said term, August 6, 1952. determined to issue and sell road improvement bonds of said Warre 1 Township, not to exceed the sum of $10,146(8). The amount of bonds issued to bear interest at the rate of 4'- P Pr cent per annum, payable semi-annually. The net assessed value of all property in Warren Township, said County ami State, a taxing unit, is $1,391.738.00. The present total indebtedness for road bonds for *aid Township, without this issue, th< re being no incorporate*! town *>r city therein, is
iii.ne.fv*. , . .
. That the proposed issue an I sale of 1$ yer cent of the retail growers! -aid rou i bonds and the proceeds to
No. 1 grade. I he derived therefrom are to be used
W pe, cent of the wholesalers ^ruction of' the'^d ’Raymord"scobee N,>. i. gnie, .1:' improvement in aald Wai
1 of the growers were familiar ren Township,
ral grades for potatoes. Ten or more tax payers, other than
those who pas poll tax only of snul Township, who feel themselves aggrieved by such determination of said Board to issue aid sell road bonds, »*IO: BETTER THAN MW ^ ! Iiy filing objection to the i"e®* °<
mOTTE, N. C., (UP)- Miss .aid bond* with the County Auditor Hwang, of Saochow, China, of Putnam County, Indiana, on or be-
fore 29 days from the day of the
^ .11. A? (•♦Wlo—-*-*
IK SAYS U. S. GIRLS
Bn nice to be an ^mei ican girl it so nice to he an Americ in
Ml* Hwang, ore of the councillors a Y. M' C. A. camp near here, thmlca ®ie American boys get a tough braak fen “I like the American boys, i )U | 1 do faal aai ry for them when I see how *h«T jump at the call of a little flap P*r. In this country there are more studonts than flappers.’’
first publicatior of <hi» notice in the newspaper in which th«» sam** will bo printed and published. If a remonstrance nr objections ate filed against the bond issue, a hearing will be given at the Court House in the Citv of Green-astle. Indiana, by said State Board of Tax Commissioners, on a day to be named by said Board. Done by order of the Board of Countv Commissioners of Putnam Com ty, Indiana, on this the fith day ^WILLIAM A. COOPER, Auditor of Putnam County, Indiana. 6-2t.
Marian Nixon, one of the newer Fox starr, mho has been pnen the iniportont aamgnmrnt of the title role in “Rebecca of Sunnybrook form,'' the new film biieed on the play by Kate Douylat H'iggin ond Charlotte Thomjoenn j
Cleveland, 3; Detimt, 1. Only games scheduled. American Association Kansas City, 15-9; Columbus. 5-8. Toledo, I; Milwaukee, 3 ill) innings). St. Paul, 2; Indianapolis. 1. Minneapolis, 3; Ijoui-ville, 2. P AIR RENEW SE A I KIENDSHIP ATLANTA. Ga. (I P) Henry A. Beaman, state legislator, of nearby Decatur, and ‘‘Bumln at” Lewis have renew, d aci|uaintance after a 22-year separation. Twenty-ino years ago Beaman was 1 first 1 In bo’sun’s mate in the navy and Frank Lewi was engaged in the business of providing meridian lise for sailors on ship duty, from a small skiff that sailoi call a “bumboat.” Beaman was attached to the flagship Connecticut when it took the ship 24 hours to VYvoj through a typhoon encounter while making a voyage from Y'ok' 1 ma to Manila. ! Lewis proceeded tl ship in a schoon-
Pr ‘
‘‘Buniboat’’ Lewi went on to other I ports, doing bu incss with sailors, ami since 1H94 has made and spent i $3,006,000. he reports. Beaman rose to the grade of l ieutenant in the 1 Navy, and was retired in 1922 be1 cause of physical disability. Recently he wa walking down an Atlanta street, pa ed a garage, and’ jin the garage wt “Bumboat” lewis. 1
! having his car repaired. TENNESSEAN OAA NS BOOK 227 YEARS OLD
KNOXVILLE, Trim. (UP)—G. S. j Ingle has come intr a possession that | j he believe- to Is rather valuable,! ! since it seem to he 227 years old | The volume, bound in calf, carries I 'this title; “The K ure.s or Types of the Old Textamei;'. by Which Christ j and the Heavenly t hings of the Gos | pel were preached to the People of j Old Explained an Improved in Sun-1
' dry
1 Dublin.” I night b> police at the | The volume was printed in London Gret•netistle authorities, , by Nath. Hillier in Dedenhall St., this morning to lie the
Over Against St. Mary Axe, In ITO.i.
GET WRONG M AN
George Hawley, arre-ted Thursday
Sermons by
Sometime Pastor
Samuel Mather, f the Church in'
Al’s Son and Bride-Elect
Si
Walter J. Smith, youngest son of former Governor Alfred E. Smith, with bis fiancee, Miss Florence E. Watson of Schenectady, N. Y.. leaving th« city clerk's office in her home tewn after they had received a
request, of was Pound wrong man.
An officer who came here .-.aid Hawley was not the man wanted for the theft of barber tools and a banjo. Poli.’e found bin on north Morton
street after he had alighted from a freight train. He had a set of barber’s tools in bi- possession, ami corresponded to the description given by Greencastle officers. — Bloomington Telephone.
license. The wadding will
er they ba held
In Albany,
marnags
TMemor (CUE By HAZEL LIVINGSTON
COP*RIOHT 1031 By KINVe f HJOrsaOSS IMC ,
CHAPTER FITTY-FOUjft Robin moved toward him Slowly, serious dark eyes, study ilgj the grand-dad who didn’t\look like anyone he had ever seen before. “He's got a good head,” her father said, taking the!little\boy on his knee. “Gets that from your mother’s side. I wouldn’t say lv bad any of the Sargent in hint, unless it's kind of around the niauth and chin.” “Does he — look so much like me?” she faltered. “Why nobody else—nobody ever . • . Robin, darling, go out in the hall to Marie She’s waiting just outside the door. And come back in 16 minutes t" us? And then grand-dad and y u and I will go home!” “Goodbye, grand-dad—” / “Goodbye, sir!” “I’ve always said he was adopted, you know,” she continued, still a little unsteadily, “It seeaneil tinbest way.” "Yes, I know. I always figured you could do it your own way, Dolly. The rest of them st emed to think it was natural, your taking a boy to adopt. Bessie didn’t act like it was anything out of the way. But I always thought ... . and of course, now I've seen him. Well, he’s a nice boy. Y'ou’ll raise him up all right. Oh . . . this is going to work out kind of bad now. I got young Sargent outside. He's waiting out by the stage door. I told him 1 “You’ve got Ken Sargent here —out by the—” "Yes, out by the stage door. He didn’t want to come in, but I told him sure, why not? I run into him as we was leaving. Right out on the sidewalk. He’s changed a whole lot, Lily Lou. Kind of lost that way he used to have that grated on me. He seemed kind of blue, walking along by himself, so I spoke to him. I hope you don't mind—’’ “Don't mind . . . oh, no . . . no. It doesn’t matter. Is he—coming in? Here?" “Unless he’s got tired of waiting. I kind of forgot him. Guess I’d better go along. Maybe I’ll come see you at the hotel tonight. That is, if you aren’t busy—” “Oh — no. I’m not busy. Do come—” • “Or if you change your mind, I’m staying over at the Travelers’ Hotel on Mission street. I figured I’d stay over tonight.” “Yes —IT1 call you, Pll — All right, dad- goodbye till then I'll see you tonight—” She went to the mirror, looked at herself anxiously. It was too late to change. .She had better receive Ken this way, in makeup—with some of the thick of it wiped off. It didn’t matter anyway. It was really duke funny . . , quite funny. “Come in!” she said. He stood in the doorway. He was, as her father said, changed. She bit her lip. An old, nervous habit, forgotten years ago . . . "It was nice of you to come,” she said, looking at his broad shoulders, his tanned face, his whole alien being. He took her hand. “It was nice of you to let me come. 1 would not have intruded, hut your father—” “Y’es—he told me.” “I’ve been to every performance, of course. But I wouldn't have intruded—" “No, of course not,” she murmured, scarcely conscious of what she w a ■ -aying. There scemrel to be nothing left to say. Here she was, and here he was, and five years, five, long hard years stood between them.
’You’ve changed,”, she said finally. J “So hove you.” , “I’m older. I've done what 1 started out to do.” “I always knew you would. I was never surprised when your name flared in the headlines, and 1 read about you in magazines and things. It was fate—’’ “Fate! It was hard work! Oh, Ken, it’s been hard. You don’t know. I couldn’t tell you. Besides . . . what does it matter. It’s all over. Sit down—tell me about yourself.” “Not much to tell. It's you who—” ' Who made the front page? No I saw your name in the papers often enough. I saved the clippings—” "Nothing tc my credit,” he said. “Oh! Some would think so. But ell me. If you did read about me, didn't you think 1 might have liked to hear from you? A word of congratulation — a line — something? That was hard to take, Ken ” Shi- had not meant to say that. I' lipped out. “Hard to take! After you left me flat!” “Em flattered that you think I did. All these years I’ve had to live down the hurt of having been 11) I he look in his eyes stopped her. She was suddenly too tired, too pent after the performance, the emotion of meeting him, her father, everything, to go on. "Il doesn’t matter.” She walked ovei to the di --.sing room, dabbed at h< r brimming eyes. Remembered that iie was still in make up, and any minute Marie would tie hock with Robin . . . with Robin . , . “You may as well know that 1 have a little hoy - five years old.” He stared at her. “You mean that you, that you have— ” “Yes. You and I. I called him Robin.” He was silent for so long that she couldn’t hear it. He shouldn't take it that way. What right had lie to look at her as if she had robbed him, when it was all his fault, when he had left her alone, to work and fight - “You had no right to keep that from me!” “But you—but I—” She was too tired. She couldn’t tell him. “Ken, don’t you see that I that I couldn't—” “Lily Lou- darling -” He lifted her in his arms, rocked her as she used to rock the Bubchen, crooning over her, whispering the foolish endearments of long ago. And she wept, and dung to him, ami wanted to talk, to explain, to ask questions . . . but she was too tired . , . and anyway, what was the use. when t)<-y were together again?
“I waited for hours, sir," Marie told Tony. “I had Robin in lied, and the ehild was asleep, hut they woke him up. I don’t like to have him woke up lie's a high-strung child. He hadn't ought to lie woke up like that, and get al 1 excited. Madame Lansing hadn’t ought to stay up all hours like that after a performance, either. She’ll lose her voice, she will. She’s frail. I don't like it.” Tony took hi- hat. "I won’t wait to see her,” he aid. “Just give her my love and tell her she’s magnifi'■qt in everything Tie does -even the foolish things. That ia, if she asks for me. She may not think of it."
May and Bess were disgusted, simply disgusted to hear that Ken and Lily Lou were married again. “My goodness, NOAV! when she's got her career in her hands! She should have stayed with him in the first place if she wanted him. Oh, it just makes me SICK!” May said. “Well, if she's happy . . Bess said doubtfully. “Yes, hut it isn’t even as if he hail amounted to anything! Raymond got the low down on the whole thing. Didn’t I tell you that Ken broke with his father right after Lily Lou left for the east the first time, and acted perfectly disgraccfully down there in South America? Raymond says he BOASTED about going down there to drink himself to death . . . yes, 1 know he doesn't drink now. I'm just telling you what this fellow told Raymond." "But Lily Lou said he’d made a big success with his coffee plantations. She said distinctly that he did all that by Himself, without any help from his father ami that was why she was so proud of him!” “Oh, fudge!" May said. “Is there any class in a coffee plantation? Shipping coffee? If he wanted to do shipping why didn't he stay with his father, and have all that capital m hack of him? Here he is nothing but a shipper when all the time he could have bet-n 111 his father’! office!” Bessie worked on the sock she was daniing. “Well, it’s taught me something. I’m going to let m> kids live their own lives. Here we broke our necks to make an opera singer out of Lily Lou ami all she wanteff was that Ken Shi rent. “And Ken's father broke his neck to keep them apart and take Ken in the business, anil afli i live years they're together again and Ken's still not in his father's business!” Tbe newspapers bad the most to say. There was a large picture of Lily Lou and Ken, ns they were sailing for South America, right after the wedding. Lily Lou was the proverbial opera star, wrapped in chinchilla, with orckids, large as any Nila Nahlman ever wore on her shoulder, smiling brilliantly. Ken, wearing a polo coat that wasn't very different from the one he wore in the old commuting days, stood in the harkgi oimil, holding small Robin, a youthful sailor in blue reefer and rap, by the hand. The newspaper caption read: "Madame Lily Lou Lansing, with her hushaud, Kent field Carey Sargent, on hoard the steamer Guadalupe With them is Robin Lansing. Madame Lansing's child by a former marriage.” Tony was much amused when he saw the picture and the caption. He and his friend, the chorus master, celebrated Lily Lou's wedding, in a little Italian restaurant, and waxed sentimental before the evening wat. over, “Fame," aid the chorus master, “Fame in hi r finger ' And now she will never sing again! AA'hat a misfortune." Tony wrapped several yards -f spaghetti loosely around his foiK. When mosi of it hail disappeared down his gaping throat, he looked at his frif-nd with wise, dark eyes and shook his head. "Fame? Poof!" he said “It is nothing Does it matter if you are famous, when you are happy?” (THE END)
