The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 December 1933 — Page 4

I HE DAILY UANNEK, GREENCASTLE. INDIANA; MONDAY, PI A {MtlLR 4.

' L A* <~Jrnav\ ( a hie and C_^ lixabclli f/hrdeti'

O^illion* of women everywhere- in America, France., England, (iermanv, Italy, Spain—have found F.lizahedt Arden * Venetian Toilet Preparation* ewemial ior uirrea home care of the skin.

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Would .Make A Lovely Gift l A COMIM.KTK STOCK— S. C. PREVO COMPANY

THE HOME STORE

0

COMPETE FOR CHAMPIONSHIP

+ *h j ♦ HF.I.I.E JIMON By, ImoKenr Hurst 4. .;. 4. 4. .j. 4.

The R«:v. ami Mrs. Dora Day, ami Mr. ami Mrs. Walter Meek nnd ilaunliters visited Mr. and Mrs. (ieorjte MeCammack Sunday. Clifford Horton and fiaimily have liMoed from Osifiwid to Belle Union. The Uniyii Valley church served

\ON-ltKSIOENT NOTH K Stale of Indiana, I'titnam Coiinty,

In tile ('irtli11 ('milI, Septinilnr Term, ll»:»3. No 1141!) The State of Indiana vs. Thomas 0. Strawn. et al Be it known I hat on the 27th day of November, I9.TI said plaintiff filed affidavit in due form, showing 4hat the defendant, June Hnimir, Miand, Klorida, is a non-resident of the State of Indiana and a necessary party to the complaint herein; and that the object of said action is Condemnation of Real Estate; >aid nonresident defendant is now, therefore, hereby notified of the pendency of said action airainst her and that the same will stand for trial on the 2nd | day of Januari, 1934. the same heinir | the 2nd Judicial day of said January Term. I!i;i4, of said Court, and unless -aid defendant appear and answei or demur to sai l complaint at said date, the same \till lie heard and deter- i mined in her absence. John W. Herod, Clerk. Phillip Lutz, Jr., Attorney General, \ Attorney. 27-3t-

dinnei at the courthouse last Saturday. Miss Merl MeCammack has return- ,o ed home after visiting heradster, Mrs. Edgar Pruitt in Moigan <our^y. ’ The Rev. Willis Gill visited with ^ Harold McCanrmack last Sunday. — Mrs. Alice Hurst is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Mamie Reed at Cloverdale; Twenty men were employed in Jt'f' ferson township last week on madeiyork projects. a Mrs. Alva Foster visited Mrs Edgar Hurst Friday.

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Members of the l-ll Club “teams judging Si • ■ • tib*' l>r<v ii*^ ewes in the annual <Judj£ rig (fittest held in connertion with the international hive S Show at Chicago. 0

CHAMPION 0

as • «-«» t> m

BANNER AHS dJEl lsr.Sl l.IS

NOV-RESIHEN r NOTICE State of Indiana, PtHnam Courtly, SS; In the Circuit Court, Septemlier rerm, IP.'i.’i. tiled Sears v.-. Allene Sears. Cause No 11420. Be it known that on the 27th day of November, l!);i!l, said plaintiff tiled affidavit in due form, showing that the defendant, Allene Sear-, is a non resident of the State of Indiana and a necessary party to the complaint herein; and that tbc object of said i action is divorce, and said non-reta- | dent defendant is now, therefore, hereby notified of the pendency of said action against her and that the j same will stand for (rial on the 30th ! day of January, 1931, the same lieing j Hid 20th Judi ia! day of Januar.' Term, 1933, of -aid Court, tmd iinless said dofendant appear and answer on lemur to said complaint iVt said date, the -ame will be heal’d and determin eii in her absence. John W. Herod, Clerk. Fied V. Thopias, Att’y. 27-3t

■wwiwaini'iiii euiiiyiw

Ce.'ilia Swiat with Gift, who arrived at tie Union Stock.Yards in Chicago Fri lay for the ♦■ntemational lave Stink hAjwsition. Gift was tlie chaiaplon rhorth irn at the Kansas City, Mo., live stink show.

o a/jouf (a

igarettes

Not so lonji a^o practically all cigarettes were made by hand

o Now, ClK’sterlM’Idw iirc iii;hIp l»y hi^b-specd inacliiiin*. tlial Itirn otil 7,'*0 cioarHlPH a niinuU>, and ibo • cigarellcs arc practically not touched by band.

I > Y ibc n;.r of lonu sicrl o\ wis in any way in ibc manufacture. * " drvinu ina< bines of ibc ( bestcrbelds are made and

most modern type and by aye- packed in clean, up-Hwdnte facinu ibc leaf tobacco for .10 lories, where the air is changed months like wine is a«ed — every 4Mi minutes. The mnis-

C besterfield tobacco is milder ture-proof package, wrapped in

and tastes better.

Only pure cigarette paper

Du Pout's No. 300Cellophane the best made—reaches you

tlie best made —Is used for just «s if you went hy the fac-

( hesterrteld.

And to make sure that every

tory door.

In a letter lit us. an emi‘

tbinjr that yoes into ( besterfield uent scientist says: is just right, expert chemists "Chesterfield Cigarette* test all materials that are used ure just ns pure us the

water you drink. ’■

V >liestcrlield cigarettes are just * '* as pure as tlie water you drink ;

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U.S. GOLD POLICY REVIVES GHOST TOWNS OF ’49

I'KOSI'EtTORS WORK THE OLD CALIFORNIA “DIGGINGS” FEVERISH I.Y

SAN FRANCISCO, (UP) — TV louring day,« of '49 are coming back to California—but minus much of their color—with tilic Roosevelt administration’s views on the nation’s latest gold policy.

In those hectic, feverish days, all trails let to California. The bonanza metal was there and they came from all directions in (he quest for it. Each passing year, however, sawmore and more gold taken until finally the soil was thought to lie panned out. The diggings gradually were abandoned. Only the ghosts of '49 remained.

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<t»IR:AV^A " '^"AY A WE DNe

JACK

Oil

ring

About a ilufhdred miles northeast i of San Francisco is a region that held I many of these old “diggings.” But

ft is no longer deserted.

The “Ghostsff of ’49" have come to life. The hills again are filled with prospectors. The banks of the riv-

with miners patfning

CRM NED • $Pj| ULUAK TASml "HMl MUCH BING SINGS!

ers are lined and sluicing. Steamboats

over th* same lamento that traveled in ’4!).

After leaving Sacramento the trail

leave® every ^ Friday up-river route to Sa:--thousands of miners

follows the Pony Express route to Folsom. In the early days Folsom was known as "Negri bar” and Mmous for a river bar about a mile long

that was rich in gold. ®

Coloma is the next stop. Here there is a monument t> James A. Marshall who discovered gold on a

sawmill site in 1817.

Less than eight miles «iway is Pla-

“Thanks" ‘TkHi.lWlw “The Day J ou (.aim-

ccrville Then Ui i, j s y ^ and Plymouth. These and many other ai e -being "worked" f„ r ^ content. I ha.- ore thousHnds|| fonea’s jolih - finding w.iyik out a living ami per afs mat, .-trike.

Mrs- J-idin ( i iwe returnedkl ing, Mich.. M imiay n ,irii}m..J it ii” Mrs VS \\ |

Mi .lull - it J the gin st of Mr W U |, I( J tu i ne.I do her home .it .SiilemjJ aftem-xin.

Astor Widow Weds Pugilist

Mrs. Madeleine Astor Force Dick, widow of John .Im- ■' Fiermonte, Italian pugilist, who were married in the New Vork where the society widow is recovering from a broken shoulder m* in a fall at Bermuda. The bride is 40, and ihc groom .5

In Romances of Astor Widow

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£, Vlt, u-w*n Iu*.ww Co

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J

VxcuftM K Dick. cJohmoTacob

l- As,’TOR Krs Formidable barriers of social caste and disparity d

aside by Mrs. Madeleine Force Astor Dick. New ’ 1 s . „ ih .N'»» society leader, who believes she has found happiness a'"*, S( «

old Enzo Fiermonte. Italian boxer, whom ? he , n ’“ r V n vt ,ar-ol() recently. It is the third marital venture for the 4U > ni |

beauty. In 1911 she married John Jacob Astor, int ,' uro pt»r ■Iter his divorce from his first wife. Returning from » ^ tll|1 k,.^ moon on the Titanic some months later, Astor wa-o ^ ’ )t , ajp l!* 1 '-*

MGY.v.n.d-wmi.rt “sss aas i ' I

a was saved to bear a

cried William K. Ulcwr nnancier, w w.,.... u N>v J.aat Suumter aha divocceiJ P‘« k Mmd

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