The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 September 1933 — Page 3

'1

_For Sale—

I I WILL NOT be resi>o)isible for — debts contracted by anyone other than

I line Weyenberg shoes ; myself, Frank Bridges, H-3p.

Iristiao

at "l d P™* 1 Bettt ' r bU> n0 ^ I MAPLE CHAPEL Ladies Aid SocMw** 1 ■ iety will serve dinner at tlit* Court S \1 F.:— Blue Damson plum*. House, Saturday, Sept !«. ^ .. 7.^ (t lie or Cling. Strains 0rcB »^-! WEY ENBER(; Work Shoes, very (best at lowest juices. Buy now, gave Buma(.E SALE on west side of , money. Harry Moore. It *' Sept. 9, at 8 a. m. 1 " hunh 6-3t. PERMANENTS: *3.00 down, bal-

1 i_... .. ..r_ - month, Godfrey

south Indiana.

L.t street. Call any time after Phone 701-L. It

wL , 6-5ts.

' ANNOUNCEMENT: Beirinning Wayne Leinbarger for Cra*y , Satunlav I will have Hugh Harnett, b1... 8 Beveridge street. Free de*|an experienced man to take care of Phone j2o-K. 7-8-13-14-15-5t |washiiiK and greaaing cars. Satisfac7T~, n 77,, „e |tion guaranteed. Sincluii Super-Ser-

»• I. Hul.bar.i.

It.

nf uAiir banner, greencasyle. Indiana, fridav. su'iemher s. is/p

m ~

PERMANENTS:

___ ance as low as 25c a ytLE: Household goods, 9011 Beauty Shoji, 1001

Call Fall Brrw - 17-209 [. ale or Flncastle. Phone John

31-Sept.

Agent.

2-4 5-8-11 j GRAND OPENING Monday, Sept.

Better buy for next I Harry Moore.

1 ing library.

[TION’ SALE: Several good L.ws with pigs by side; also Little Greencaatle Community lam Saturday, Sept. 9. Ip

1 SALE OR TRADE: Gas range L condition. Phone 229-Y. Ip

8-2t. DANCE to the music of Mack’s Midnight Rambler* Saturday night at Banner Club. jp

SALE: | Raial 310.

Frying

chickens It

SALE:—Milk fed frying <lie> ed and delivered any (

—NOTICE— Dear Wilbur: Please come back home. I have changed my mind and 1 am sorry for what I said. Lot’s go to the Granada Sunday and see Charlie Buggies in "Mamma Loves Papa.” Love. Jessie.

+ + + + MORTON Mrs. Sarah Lane

•b

HOLLY WOOD.—Too bail to disappuint the y.issips and the genuine well wishers but the recent appearances together of Carole Lombard and William Powell ilon’t mean a thing. Then will be no reunion. 1 asked Carole and .she broke the silence that she has maintained since the swift parting that sent her to Reno for a divorce an ! Bill into seclusion at Arrowhead Hot Springs. “We will never go hack together; I feel I can say that positively.’’ I hat’s Carole’s answer, and you couldn't pi.t it plainer. The blonde -tar is still seeing Powell because he is asking her to, because that is h"!idea of civilized divorce. / ”1 think it', fine,” she said, “when two people who have separate I 1 can meet like friends Hard feedings, criticisn s would he too awful ” .So, I’m afrau it’s no use. Carole and Bill will go their separate ways

staying with her until he returns to

Hay Plume fiOS-L-

SALE Frying chickens, ]r ks and Rhode Island Reds, |! 4 lbs. W E. M» Bride. Phone

8-2t

Fri.-tf | WILDWOOD

Music by Bob

'Dance Sunday White's Band.

night. 8-Ip

DELIVERY NOW. car 6-inch If al. -haft mined. A. J. Duff. ■ ,117. 8-2t IT BULBS Until Monday night ev list. I will sell Darwin lulb at .'lOc per dozen, or $-2.00 nirel. I have red, black, yellow l bluidi pink, and a few of oth- » Minnetta Wright, S. Jack- , Phone 555-Y. 1p I SALE: Milk fed frying chickli each. Piione your order. We 1 Saturday. Phone Rural 106. I Burks’ farm. 7-2p SALE: — Two registered Kiie Rucks, 1 yearling Angus § W Berry, Greencastle, K 3. 6-8-2p.

ft Mimhall Lump Coal, more u-h Delivered anywhere, Ins *3 60; Mill wood, cord $1 25; I lumber, 1 x wide per 100 ft It anh on delivery- Tribby’s ft Ph 1 ■ 123. 24-25-31-1-7-8

- For Rent— RFA'T: Modern three room ► i apartment with steam heat, I :i<iui and private bath. Phone I all at 511 Anderson St. It

PRICE CORRECTION The price on crackers n, Kroger's ad yesterday should have read li) cents instead of 12 cents.

THE WEATHER Fair and continued warm tonight and Saturday, becoming unsettled over north portion Saturday .

ROOSEVELT YSKS GREATER EFFORT TO AID UNEMPLOYED

WASHINGTON, Sept. 8, (UP) President Roosevelt today called for a greater effort on the part of the public inbringing relief to the unemployed. At the same time he yvarned that theie are many areas mingling the relief question with politics and then coining to the federal government “hat in hand” seeking federal funds.

BANNER ADS CET RESULTS

It happened in the forrcourt at the "Dinner at Eight” rremieie. A jiroininent y uing .ocialite was forcing hi> way through the crowd“Who’s that'.''' -omeone asked. “That’s Drexel Biddle Steele.” “Oh yeah,” -aid Donald Stewart absently, “what did it close at?’’ Tired of the ho.-uiul, L-ilyan Tashmai has persua I her doctor to let her go home. She is under the care of a nurse and is looking forward to Kd Lowe’s return Wonder what that young gas station att.ndant would th'nk if he knew 'hat the pint of blood he gave was for I.ilyar Tash man? They introduced her to him simply as Mr- Lowe A hospital towel swathed at >und l.ilyan’s head prevented recognitionI.upe Velez proudly displays Johnny Weissmuller’s latest gift to h“r, .» lender platinum circlet set in varicolored (hie stones. The trick is that the -tones symbolically spell “dearest.” A row of diamonds —“D”; a row of emeralds- “K”; 1 row of amev thists—“A”; a row >f rubies “R”* with more emeralds, saphires and topazes finishing out the sentimental inscrij lions. Hollywood Parade Lila Lise’s young s-an, James is

I Hoi belt Scott of Brazil spent La'bor day with Miss Freda Lawter. John Darrell of Muneie is spending the week with Mrs Edith Miller and

St. John’s Military Academy Jimmie fami, . v Hn<i • Mr - »»<* Mrs. Arthur Bell, is <1 years old, has dark hair an 1 eyes Emsterad flodfelter and family of like Lila's ... Hollywood’s ever-prea-! 0kla ioma have been visiting Mrs. ent snapshooter, Hyman Fink, crash-r :arri ‘‘ Flislfelter and other relative* el Katherne Hepburn's secret geta and attended the Clodfelter reunion way, and quite by accident. He came ; 't Fincastle Sunday. tv> the airport to see Ruth Waterbury 1 s - Laura Inge and Mrs. I^ela off ami bumped into the elusive Kath- ' armichat l were in Greencaatle on arine, who wa- flying east by the Fuesday same plane. La Hepburn wore a w hite 1 'D'- l,,u * Mrs. Jesse Knauer of Insummer coat and a navy blue stock- 'banapolis called on Mr. and Mrs. ing cap- Ami pity fan magazine William Lane Monday, editor Ruth Waterbury she had a -' lr . and Mrs. Mint Marshall of seat next to Hi pbura ami couldn't in- Greencastle are spending several terview her because d' the noise of 'biys at the home of Mr. and Mrs. the motors . . Carroll Graham, co James Albin, while the latter make a author of “Queer People.” i* finiahing !,r 'P to Florida,

a serious novel, “Donlertown.” It’s about Mexicali . . . Holly* ,id is pre- 1 paring to give Gus Arnheim a rousing reception when the popular or-{

FISHIER AND FISHIER

chestra leader returns to the Beverly j Wilshire Hotel. The da e Septembei

LINCOLN, Kan, (UP) -The fish st lies in this community are getting

-*'■ better and better. During the recent —' I dry spell, anglers were quoted as say. Did You Know |in w that four-pound channel cats I hat Maurice Cheva! r has been an chased jackrabbit* three miles from electrician, carperUr. printer and the river. nail maker in h-s varied cured ?

HEDGE’S MARKET

PIIONE 12

( buck Roast 1 oc “

BREAKFVST BACON Whole or Half Side

1

11 C

Ground Beef 3u,s 25c FRESH LEAN Boiliiur Beof 5c Lb -

B V< • 'N, Sugar t ured, 1 to 3 Lb. Piece, Lb.

LARD 3n>s.22c

Coffee. Bluebird, Brand- l b

15c

PURE PORK Sausage 4 in. 25c LEAN Fork Steak 10c Lb Large Juicy FRANKS .! ibs. 28c

SKANKl l - s Picnic Hams Dependable Brand 9’c IJ> -

Pork (hups End cut lb-

12ic

F’resh Pork Brains. Lb.

5c

Light ('leanner 3 Can*

House 10c

F’resh Pork Liver, 2 l.bs.

S’l A TFi BE U MKIED KU VDS / lighways resulted in the removal of HARRIS1M R(; Pa. (UP) A cam- It),219 advertising p stir-, from the paign to beautify Pennsylvania's right of way along the pavement.

UK.

Jl I IAN PREPARES

I W O CIIEM1S I RY P VPEKs Hr. Piercy L. Julian who i- doing 1 work in advanced chemistry at l)ePauw University on a res arch fel low-ship, has two paper- which will be presented to the Chicago meeting 1 of the American (Tv cical Society I which will be in session there Septem-

ber 10-15.

Bernard M Sturgis. , -nior it. DePauw last year, collab-oa'.c l with Dr. Julian on one of thes- papers Roth are considered important additions to the field of Chemical iv i-arch Both Dr. Julian an Mi Sturgis - were gratuated from 1). I’.mw in 1933. 1 Dr. Julian received his I’h I) degree from the University of \hei n., with highest honors and ha- b-1 n pro ft 1 or of Chemistry at FI uvard University in Washington D C II - will ■ontinue his research a: D I’.uiw dur•ng the coming year. Mr. Sturgis, whose Iv m- i- Butler, Ind , received his Rect 1 S. h.darship at DePauw four years uo- through the Fklisot contest- H- -ik -l with Dr. Julian in his reaeai It in Minshall Laboratory all during August in jireparation fog this paper •

RF.NT: One two-room kitchl iii bath apartment, furnished knisiipd. Wilbur Donner. 8-2t RFAT: One six-room strictly newly decorated house on 1 avenue. Wilbur Donner. 8-2t

IREXT: Five room modem garage. Phone 565-Y. 8 2ts.

RFN’T Unfurnished modern ■decorated I or 4 tf ■ m ap.ut IR'a light and water furnlsh|Highl:ind street. 8-2t I RENT: Six room modern I i t Hanna at 1 >-el ( all l M RENT: Four room part of bnil South Indiana street f Browning. It KEN1 Two hi three room I rtment, MS Eoet Aodor- | I’bone 453-Y 6-8-2t RENT: Six room modem •ent an| garage, second floor, I'l'imated, reasonable rent, 210 |ry street. Call 156-Y. 6-3t

The

whole thing

v was settled long

$ U

V:

ago

..>1

r

A CHEVROLET SIX

: .

costs less to run

A

El NT; Furnished first floor c >iutc el poeou wnb J ti: Indiana St. H-3p RENT: 4 room modern apart I Water furnished. Suitable for f 1 ' 1 vu, e . r two ladies. 812 South av «- Phone 586-X. 7-4t -“Wanted— MED: Pullets, early hatched pv hens. Mrs. Albert EitelFreencastlo R. 4. 7-2t ^' | LD: Soy Ix-an hay or oat* E W Baker, County Agent. 8-2t-T 'ED Any kind of dead stock P- Greencastle.- We pay all P John Wachtel Co. ’ 24-tf r 1 1 D: To rent five or six room house. Reasonable. I

Miscellaneous—

fc* CAFE

w

Gov 4

Hem*

1-tf

^MTEVROLET’S reputation as the moat economical car in the wor ld began a long time ago, when motoriats discovered how to aavc with a Chevrolet. The Chevrolet valve-in-head 6-cylinder engine gets extra miles out of a gallon of gas, but this is only part of the savings. Chevrolet owner* don't have to pay the penalty ’ for needless extra cylinders, extra rings and pistons, or extra valvea. Thousands of Chevrolet owners have never spent a cent on their car*, except for gasoline, oil and tires. The records of companies that operate big fleets of cars back up this fact. They say that Chevrolet* cost less to run than any other car* they know. Tha good word spread fast, and so the whole economy question wa* settled long ago. No car except the most economical car could earn such overwhehning leadership in sales as Chevrolet has earned —leader in four out of the past six year*, far ahead again this year. But Chevrolet dealers don’t expect you to accept the opinion* of others. Drive the new Chevrolet. Find out for yourself why Chevrolet—the most economical car-has become Americas most popular car. aw _ r L. & H. Chevrolet Sales Inc. 115 N. Jackson Street—Phone 34*

The Love Trap II by ROBERT TERRY SHAMOM

lCOt*YHlGHr*lsY Hl+JQ Ft'A-TUHES SYM Pi £ AT E t J M <

lb

COt^YH IbH rL/Htt. Y/JVl CATS

J

SYNOPSIS Pretty Mary Kennedy breaks her engagement to the elderly but wealthy sports promoter, Buck Landers when she falls in love with bis young ward. Steve Moore. Landers kidnaps Steve and threatens to frame him unless Mary marries Landers. Mary flirts with Landers’ henchman, Bat, to gain his confidence. She learns of Steve's whereabouts and goes there alone. It) a dingy flat, Mary is confronted by two thugs who deny all knowledge of Steve. They hold her and phone Landers. Landers arrives and orders his men out. When Landers refuses to leave. Mary shoots at him, but misses. He flees. Steve confesses to Mary that he is engaged, but he loves her. Mary has misgivings when Steve plans a visit to Kileen Calvert, his fiancee, to explain the situation. CHAPTER XXXIII. ARY, staying at her sister’s place in Brooklyn after Steve bad gone, lived in a state of faith. Steve would come back to her. Eileen Calvert, with her wealth and beauty—Mary assumed the other girl possessed Kith —would have no power to weaken Steve’s love. She tried to hold these thoughts fast in her mind. If she continued to think them then they would be true, but her confidence was not founded upon her own charms; her whole faith centered around the love Steve bore her. She could close her eye* and see him - close her eyes and Mill feel the magic of his kisses. She told her sister and father nothing of Steve. Merely, she said, she hud quit her job over in New York and would be with them for a while until she found another. Without much trouble she could obtain some sort of work in Brooklyn, and so it developed. An employment agency found her a place in the office of a big insurance coinjiany. This, though, was a mechanical aspect of life that scarcely held her attention; she could do satisfactory work by instinct alone, even while her upper mind was filled with dreams of Steve. She wrote him long encouraging letters, and when his first one to her arrived, 'he touched the paper w ith a kiss before reading it. “What can I tell you, my lovely one, that I’ve not said to you l*e fore?” he wrote. “When l think of your goodness to me, and your bra vary, my heart simply melts. All the way up on the train, I kept thinking how fine you were, and what a nerve 1 have to assume to take care of you through life, w hen you certainly deserve a million things that I am not able to give you. You see, Mary darling, 1 simply want th* best of everything for yon, now and always Do you mind waiting till 1 can buy you limousines and yachts? If 1 have enough brain in my head to earn such things, they will all lie at your disposal. I’ll park them all in front of you like children’s toys. But all that luxury, I’m afraid is a long way off. I haven't had a chance to tnlk to Bill yet about my business future. Nor have 1 had a suitable opportunity to break the news to Kileen that I’m in love with you. As a mat ter of fact, I've scarcely seen her alone since I’ve been here. We played tennis this morning, and went horseback riding this after-

Boon.

Tonight I sneaked off to my room to pen you this hasty note. Ph ase don’t worry about anything, Mary and I'm not going to worry either. I know everything is going to he perfectly fine for us. I don’t even worry about Buck Landers — be cause I know he has shot his bolt and i* through. All the same, 1 want you to keep out of his vicinity and stay exclusively in Brooklyn, if it isn’t too much of a hardship. A pillion kisses, darling, and gvod

night. I’ll write tomorrow and I’ll he waiting with a high fever for the first letter from my beloved girl.

STEVE."

That night she wrote him from the fullnes of her heart: “Steve, this is to tell you that I’m living in love, 1 actually am. It is food and drink to me, and when I breathe my lungs are full of it. Does that sound foolish? I w’uiild like to write in letters of tire in front of you, so you could see it forever and never forget it. I LOVE YOU. Joet close your eyes and see if you can imagine those three words in front of you like a big electric sign in gold letters.

could write a hundred pages like this, without changing the subject. While you are gone, 1 will think of you by day and dream of you by night. Hut hurry back us soon as you cun, darling. I am waiting in a wonderful trancel MARY.” She went to a corner letter box and jiosted it. Tomoivow it would be in his hands, and he would be reading it! Next moaning she was all eagerness to read'the letter she would find waiting from him. But he had not written; at least, no letter had arrived. Throughout the day at the office she thought of him. with her mind shifting, occasionally, to Kileen Cal-

She arrived from the office and still there was no letter.

“Do you really love me, Steve? I want you to tell me that you do—I couldn't possibly get tired of hearing it over and over. “I’m surprised to find that I can endure your absence without too much unhappines, because I think so much about you that it seems you are almost at my elbow every minute. Sometimes when I'm all alone, I am almost happy that you have gone away long enough for me to have time to realize how K uuliful it all is. When you are with me, I’m always »o tingling and excited that I can’t really appreciate anything “I could write you a lot of things about what I’m thinking and the plans I'm making but what’s the use? The only important fact is that I love you so much more than I can express. You will find the right way to handle your affairs with the Culverts, darling, and you must do it in your own way. And your way, Steve, will alwaya suit me, whatever you do. Just so that I know you will go on loving me, 1 don’t rare much what else happen*. Do you realize, my loved one, how completely a girl gives herself to a man when she truly loves him? I mean that you own all of me- every bit there is — and l want you to know that I haven't a wish or thought apart from your desires. “Am I too bold in_telling you ail this, Steve?* I hope you won’t think so. I am not ashamed of thi# perfectly gorgeous love that has come to me, and why should l be ashamed to admit it frankly? You see, I am trying with all my might to make you understand how Jeep it ia. I

vert. l.a*t night or was it two nights ago? He probably had told F’.fleen that he could never many her. It would he diflteult for Xteve with hia kindly nature to utter the fatal words. Mary actually felt a keen sorrow for Eileen. It was no use being jealous of a girl who wart suffering such a tragic disapjiointmerit. Besides, she was rich and charming and, really, she wouldn’t have any trouble finding another suitor. Of course, it was impossible that Fiileeu could love as deeply as Mary I No one on earth had ever loved like thi* before. Why, actually and literally, she would walk into tire for Steve I But Eileen would take it gracefully; the beautiful dark eyes would dim for a moment with despair, and then she would realize that Steve had never really belonged to her at all. Both of them would understand that they had not actually loved it had merely been a boy ami girl affair. Mary hoped that Steve would be very gentle and dignifieff -it would he much easier if he kept that attitude. She imagined she could trust him not to get sentimental and give Eileen a farewell kiss, or anything like that. Not that it really mattered but it would be better all around if he didn’t. She arrived home from the oflle* and still there was no letter. That night the family went to a movie, but she remained home in the hope* of a speeial delivery; but non* came. Before the others cam* back, however, she had a telegram front the CaUkill*. (To B« ContinuedP '• tiopyrifbt, king K-aturce BjnjieaW. In*