The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 June 1934 — Page 3
' vv
SS1F1ED ADS .for Sale— . j^LE-llodern ciprht room ‘ wtll located. Call at 1028 • liana street. A l.:ir K ain. 31-3p I'.lBMS rolt SALK Aoies. • r > m ^ es southeast of rfoslsville, known as the Charles ^j tf farm. ( ' 0 °d soil an<l fair On good travel roail. Aires. 0 miles southwest of fonlsville. Oood buildings and suitable for pasture. :i Miles southeast of L at( ., Go-1 soil and buildings and ji.Kxl gravel road. .. Acres. At Waveland, Ind. t« i sets of buildings, a portion .land suitable for dairying and for farming. This farm is road No. 47 and is well loC f„ r a filling station and tourist
i Acres. 4' j miles southwest of hdale, Ind., known as the Mary •nan farm. Good buildings and general purpose farm. Acres. 5 Miles west of Rain.on cement road No. 30, known William Key farm. Fair builJand a good general purpose , Acres. 3 Miles west of PoitMills. Ind. Good buildings, fine f blue grass for dairying or i pasture. Acres. 3 Miles south of FillFair buildings and fair soil, ourth mile from cement road. Acres. 4 Miles west of RoachA poultry farm, a small bam i. Acres. 3 Miles southeast of ion on a good gravel road 1 j least f state road 43. Good Ings and good soil. Acres. 4 Miles northeast < f jiall mi Sugar Creek. Good huild,'iai good general purpose farm. I Acres. 5 iVlile- north of Marimprovements hut good land com land on a good gravel Aires. 5 Miles southeast of nan, Parke county. Fair imTienls and fair soil, suitable foi Possibilities of coal under arm. One mile from state road Acres. Of good unimproved county soil, 3 miles northwest Jbiuu n, Indiana, on a good gravel ,.V rvnt "h'-n you can own a fyrni own in a short tinae. Terms "in able. file to John A. Eversole, Special tsentative, Louisville Joint St >c k bank, 1’luffton, Indiana. 2 - 8-2t
—Wanted
pGl WANT full value for city
New Way—Safer—Wetter.
HOME LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS
unk ('. Schoenman THE JEWELER *»t»h, Clock and Jewelry Kepniring *22 E. Washington
w. C. GLASCOCK JEWELRY & MUSIC b. ( lock. Jewelry & Musical Instrument Repairing, Phone 428
“'Y IT WITH FLOWERS" Phone 636 Eitel Floral Co. •on County’s Leading Florists FbEENOR’S ngs Sundries EOUNTAIN SFRVICE "pen All Day Sunday.
L & H. Hcvrolet Sales Inc. W. HOLLOW F,LL N. Jackson
Hi«:h Point () il Company ^ Statintm MNCO Prmluctn
K| EY SERVICE STATION ' N ERiks — LEE TIRES 1 "II.I.IPS f,r, GAS K OIL Airport Road
WE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE. INDIANA.
SATURDAY, JUNE 2, 1934.
So remarkable a facial resemblance Joes Ralph Alsman (above) bear to »hn Dillinger, Mid-West despert to, that he has been arrested four tin.es, twice in Ohio and twice in Michigan in mistake for the outlaw. Alsman is a peaceful, law-abiding
property, farm, or stock of goods, write Arthur Woods, Cl.iyton, Ind., agent for auction company. i-2p
WANTED: To purcha •• used sidedeli ven hay rake—stat make, use, ami lowest cash price; al-o to trade (! H. P. International yasoline engine for 1 H. I’, engine. .1. I!. Iturris, Cloverdale. 29-31-June 2*3ts.
WANT Greencastle home or farm for ll-ro'm Plymouth, Ind. double home and 4 lots clear. \V. Singleton, Rrazil, K. 3. May 29-31-June 2-b K D-fip.
WANTED: Tw . or three room lower unfurnished apartment, dose in, reasonable. Phone 197 after 2 p. m. l-2p WANTED: Any kind of dead stock. Call 273. Greencastle. We pay aP charges. John Waehtel Co. coo —For Rent— FOR RENT: Five room modern house corner Liberty and \ me streets. Walter Heath. 2-3|i. —Miscellaneous—
Regular trips to Chicago; party of four. Gall 7C.9-K. 26-fip
at CV>umty Farm
4 p. in- daily-
2-It.
V'isiting hours from I :-!0 p. m- ti
READ 1 \NRR CLASSIFIED ADS
mitiii: i o M>>-in>iiM A is nr I'l I I I lo\ I II s| | I III: 11. i ts i \ n : Stale of Inillioia Futnain (bounty In IMiimim i'ii.nil Court April V. i m. No.72»s I-_' .Mary I' And* i ^ou. Ailministratrix of (he csi.ii* <»! Ki( h.ml M. Baker, deI’tGISftl
Hosall I *. • m (; Hall; l
Mary C. AmlerHon; . K Han. Henry Amlersiiu; Mary F.
uihi
To
ty, Imi el'eiiila i
r.l petit loner as ud-
. i siate siforesaid, •ult Court of Puti. a petition, mnkthereto, aial pray-
urder and decree of
/.inn - the sale of m lonffinK; to tiie vn\, and in said make assets for
I pe- • t lie
leney F. Mall, Henry Hall, and I'hmeiie M Xuderson.
You are se\» lall.i hereby notified
that the above n miuistrai rix of lias filed in the
iiaui Count inn you d<
Iuk therein for o said eourl author tain Real Kstate I la i e of r#add d* - • <1 I it ion described, i o payment of tin* d< said estate, and at the sale of your said real estate t said real estute among I b»* fraet i( without damage t lias also filed a therein that you non-residents of t oi* that your residi that said petition is now pending, isaid Circuit Court
in (treenonsth\ ludian
•»4 11K?i.
WllneKH Ilic f'lerk ind seal of said eom-l Hils June L^SL w , IKHOp
Clerk Futnain Circul f Court.
Andrew K. Inirham Attorney. 2--5t
nd liabilities of the same time foi • viral interests in i t he reason t hat i annot he divide*I
a I owners thereof!
said owners; nnd| affidavit averring d earh of you are Slat«’ of Indiana,
n and
is unknow
nd w
set for hearing in
filed, ami
t'hich;
the Court House on September
OBITUARY Elizabeth Catherine Farrow, the -eeond child of David Parker and Elizabeth Farrow, was born Sept. 2. 1X4C on a farm 3 mil-s west of Greencastle, and departed this lif May 2 6, lit.!4, at .be age of K” years X months and 26 days. Her young life was spent ::n th‘old homes lead, 3 miles west of Greencastle, under the watchful emu of devoted Christian parents, ■he early in life accepted the word ol God and united with the Melho- • li.st churib. Her kind disposition and coin-ideiati n of oihers created many friendthips which continued througheut her entire life. On August X, 1X70 she was united in marriage 10 William P. Wimmer. lb y resided on a farm mar the oil borne. ' (M this marriage there were seven children, G riiude Browne of Indianapolis; I s.-i,. Winkler of (’banlis, W a.-hington; Claude of Greencastle; Omar of .Marshalltown, Iowa: Andrew of Bainbridge; and Nelli,, and Oscar who died in Infancy. Surviving her there ar** ab.o nine grandchildren, live great-grandehil-ilren, a large numlier of other relatives, and friends. Hi 1 it lit hey moved to Greencastle wher they lived and enjoyed th* ii borne and friends unlil the death 1 the helm d husband and father, August 10. 1926. In her passing she was the last m mber of one of the pioneer families of Picnam County. CARD OF THANKS VV wish to express our appreeia tion to all those wh so kindly us si ed us during ilie illness and death of our dear Mother. Th, Family. DEPAUW NOTES Wayne Affolter, Ik Pauw Univerity student Horn Evansville, has been elected editor in chief of T he Mirage, DePauw University yearbook for thi coining year- Jay Smith, Vincennes, ha- been chosen managing editor; Adrian Wilhoite, Lebanon, business manager; K.lizalieth Creist, Rensselcaer, lit, rary editor; and Margaret Strk'kler, Iketioit, Mich., assistant business manager- All are members of the sophomore class. The y earbook is a junior class project. Mr Affokter is a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity; Mr. Smith of Men’s Hall Association; Mr Wilhoite of Delta Tau Delta; Miss Greist of Alpha Gatmunu Delta and Mis- Stickler of Delta Ihdta Delta. Blue Key, senior honorary for men, and Kappa Tau Kappa, interfratemity council at DePauw University, have elected officers for the coining year following itheir initiation of junior pie iges. John Derby, Deerfield, 111-, was chosen president of Kappa Tau Kappa ,und Robert Lee, South Bi 11 i, of Blue Key. Other officers ate: Kappa Tau Kappa—William Powell, Kvanstm, 111-, vice-president; and Robert Fribley, Newcastle, secre-tary-tieasurer- Blue Key- Richard Reynolds, Marion, vic«-|>t sident; Charles Brown, Ismisville, Ky., seeretary; an i John Thomas, Greencastle, treasurerThree DePauw University students conducted a series of experiments in psychology as a term project. Eugene Pulliam, Lebanon, expeiimenuig with the influence of smoking on involuntary reactions, reached the conclusion that nicotine slows up nerve reaction- On the other hand, Jed Pearson, Indianapolis, experimenting w..h th* effect of coffee on the nervous system, found that caffein spec, s up the reflex action in its response to stimuli and was a beneficial stimulantThomas Ewing, student from Danville, III., used a system of mazes with electrical blind alleys to determine the effects of pain upon learning- He found that electrical shocks impressed the location of posts upon the mind. The apparatus was constructed in the psychology laboratory under the direction of I>r. Paul J- Fay, assistant professor of psychology. Floyd Shuttleworth, DePauw University senior from Alpine, has received a graduate scholarship in botany in '.he University of Cincinnati. Mr Shuttleworth majoicd in this ileparlmenl at DePaww an I plans to use the scholarship in graduate work toward his doctor’s degree.
To Fly for U. S.
Lieutenant Lawson II. M. Sanderson, U. S. Marine Corps flier, who has been selected by the National Ae.ronautic Association to reprewnt this country in the international air meet at Vincennes, France, on June 9. I.ieut Sanderson is widely famed fur his acro-
batic flyuig.
NOTICE OF A DM INI.STB VI ION Notice is hereby given tluit the undi reigned has been ointid by the Judge of the Circuit O .irt of 1’utnam County, State of Inn ana, A mini '.tutor if tlie estate of John A. Cooper, late of Putnam Cdimiy, decased. Said estate is sui -ed to be .-ul-
vent.
Francis McClure, Vdminis'.rator-
June 1, 1934.
AI !>ert H William uitomey. John W. Herod, Clerk of the Put-
n.im Circuit C.mrt. 2-:it
l
my grot xl» jarents—aft I a little stone '-uh - with a lamb at the top, my little 1 brother « He’s been three, let's see, ^
fifty-f jur years this spring.
“VV jen Decoration day comes I go to ti ami places ip my heart. Their men *,ry is sweeter and greener than , any flowers and it don’t wilt like 1 1h> aquets. The colors gets prettier a' Jd the smell gels sweeter every
j J A ar.
“I have, a memorial raised in my I heart t int lust us well as any granite
THE EASY ( II VIR
does.”
M. M. N.
How we crave a short road to a dt - 11 GOA I. BREF.DEF.S CONSIGN
*
FILLMORE
.j. 6- •!• v
Rev. Wilbur Da and family Delphi wore recent g h -ts of his parents, Mr: and Mrs. 1 • ink Day. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Garrett visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Sutherlin in Parke munty.
Miss Elioise Hicks, who is employed in Indiana|>olis, ..pent the w ekend
at home.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Elliott and daughter Virginia were Sunday guests f Mr. and Mrs. VVilford Whicker of Amo. Mrs. Phil Carpenter ami daug ter Margaret of Colfax are vidting VIis. Kate Campbell and family. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Roark and Mi Madelyn O’Dell visited Victor Alice and family, near Plainfield, Sunday. O. L. McKamey attended the Masonic gland lodge at Indianapolis last
week.
Mrs. Jessie Talburt of Greencastle visited Sunday with her brother I'r l Brown and family. Miss Hazel Eckels and Mrs. Harold Douthell of Gary are visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Eckels.
Miss Ma Iona (liven who is attend ing school at Tei ip Haute, spent the weekend at home. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wright were Sunday guests o' \Ir. and Mrs. Tom Bioadstreet at Po :ul Park. Mrs. Clay How rd of Greencastle spent Saturday with her father,
Thomas Sh! Ion Courtland Sim
spent Sunday at
Ferrand.
Miss N'oia Suti lin of Greencastle visited Mr. and M . Rnbert Garrett Sunday night. Mrs. Rebecca Sh k of Indianapolis visited relatives ai I fiien Is here this
week.
Later Hicks is spending his furlough from the navy with hi parents Mr. and Mrs. Ott Hicks, Mrs. Maggie Grose of Greencastle spent Tuesday with Miss Cora Flyn.
,-ired result. Household utensils are udvertis ml I as “labor savers.” Correspondence schools advi -1 ise “short cuts” to various degrees of
culture.
The curse upon Adam was “in the sweat of thy brow shalt thorn eat bread.” Several millions of people in< the last few years would be gla ii to have a job that prod us! a Little o'.eat. Labor itself has hero 111»x a desired end not something to elim-
inate labor.
The folks in Hamebn Town rib In’t want to kill rats. It was a nasty jioli. The Pied Pi|jer offered a sort o£ magic solution of their civic problem. It would have been lietti 4- if they hail sweat a little, killing Iheii iwn rats. When the waters ef J crico were tainted, the water eompar<y (if any) was not willing to folio* the stream toward the source until they found the taint. They welcomed Elisha beeaus.' he offereil an eitsy ajid quick solution. “Behold t e (< cati' 11 f the city is pleasant but the. waters
ire tainted,” they whined.
Taint isn’t always confined to the water supply, important as that is. Entire nations are sometimes situate I pleasantly but the whole way of life and trend of thought is tainted. *•'| Elisha straightened things out with *** s .It. It is still a purefier and a pref sei vative. We’re running around .veiling for sugar when what we need
is salt.
Vachel Lindsay prayed: “Gallahad, knight wlio perished, awaken again, Teach us to fight for immaculate ways among men.”
CAT ILK TU SHORTHORN SALE
-
Amnoun< mcni of the 9ili annual I Aliaiia Sliori hot'll llieedcis' As* elation sale ,o he h< Id June 6 at th* State Fail' rounds, Indiaiiaixdls, re-<-alls the iinl(|iip 1 "cord ol ihi.- tissociaiion in currying out a well planned program. It was at the Pm due Ajgrieuliui'al c nfen n -e i-i J.ui nary. 1926. that the niemb> rs \ n I to star; the r aiiniial sales. Tluii plan was to hold five eenrecu'i\-•
regard lees of pile, s ri'r.dved. to give the plan a chance to show Its merit. The cattle were to he s 1 sled by a committee oMishlerahle in advance of the sab so hreeders could get thnr pr">;ierly fitted. It was also agr‘' d to have the racle publicly judged during the forenoon of *ale day to give the public a chance t .study the cattle before
m.iking bids.
Sim Evans, Doiul.l VV le t 1 Ralph Glcillel'i'i, and J. B. .McCabt' .v .:ons fi" n thlr county, are consigning ca.lh- ,0 this sale. S-M r- I a is Harry P. McCabe. (Ireencastl . will gladly
furnish iiualogs.
REWED ON ANNIVERSARY I’NIO.NVILLK, O. (IF) Foi Hiim in r,y years, Aliens’a
Ft itz stoorl befrti. the
peal'd 1 be
ay.
second
and Reinti ),(
Hrv. Paul S< bwnn and rideiiin vows of matr!
being man i d
aid tiny wan 1 I to marital pled;; s Those Inal bridal par’y ;:il|
pres mr.
ball ren1111.'
repeat of the
Hvln
After they Hi ir orig-
Planning Blow at Gangdom
ir of Indianapolis ihe homo of C. .1.
Escaped Assassins
NOTICE OF FINAL SEI ELEMENT OF ESTATE
Rear Admiral Cyrus Willard Cole, who has been appointed commander of the U. S. Navy's submarine force 1 to aucceed Rear Admiral John W,| Greonalade. The latter will be asiigned to the general board of the Navy Department.
Notice is Ip reby given to ihe Cr rilors, Heirs and Is'gatces of Joseph ('. Baker, deceased, to appear in 'h Putnam Circuit Court, h I I a<.'rneneaHUe, Inilianu. on the 251’' day of June, 1934. and show raw', if any. why the. Final gettleiuenl Acci lints with ihe estate of said deced.in should not be’approved; and said Tie|rs are notified to then and th re make proof of hi Irship. and rt'ceivr their distributive shares. WUii'ss, the Clerk of said Court, Ihi 1 day pi June. 193 I John VV. Herod. Clerk Putnam Circuit Court. • Cause No. J 090. A E. Durham, Atty.
Once one of the sideshows in Barnums cirrus i*eeame overcrowded, an I ;t resourceful member of the management prepared and put up this sign, “See the Egress.” If there is one thing more intriguing than another,I for Americans it is something new— I anything new. The crowd immediately milled to-1 ward this sign, scared for fear they were going to miss something. They | passud through the door and found | themselves in‘the street.
A three-cornered conference in Washington during P. note hearing on ti to regulate commerce in firearms. Left to right. Col. E. S. Hut. hin . chief investigator for Senate Committee on Crime and Criminal IT: tices, Senator Royal Copeland, New York, sponsor of the hill and <0 uxittee chairman, and Joseph B. Keenan, Special Assistant Attorn
At Dedication of New Dam
Recent attempt on life of Jefferson Caffery, U. S. Ambassador to Cuba, when gunmen fired into his Havana home, wounding a Cuban guard, has created intense excitement in official circles. President Mendieta ( ailed a meeting of the Cuban Cabinet and every resource of the government is being used to trace would-be assassins.
Three cheers for wash day! It . oems to me there is a lack of enthusiasm in your response. Do I just imagine it? There are two schools of thought about this universal desire for happiness. One is to attain it by getting what you want. This is the way all prefer hut few have. The other way is to want what you can get. This is tiie harder way but the way open to all. So often the way open to all is the hard way! The electric washei and the depression have gone into cahoots to make washer women of us all. There are really worse things) than w alking along in the green gras- j surrounded by fragrant blooming svringa, vvitli your neighbor’s Orien-j tal poppies glowing and burning like, Japanese lanterns. The wrens contest your light to the clothes-line, the robins < une unbelievably close to your feet, and a young turtle dove sits on the edge of the |>orch roof and opens round eyes at the world be is 1 just a little bit afraid of. Clothes white and sweet are strung along in appropriate groups and, l<ecause mother had to be careful of color, we still find bits of shade for the dress that science has tinkered with until neither soap nor sun can fade it, A line of clothes between the green below and the blue above gives a woman a fine sense of accomplishment. After all, cleanliness is next to godliness. Of course there was a pretty messy performance before the cloth s were ready for the line, but let us re t mention that at this time. Undo Jason hadn’t tieen feeling “right pert” for several days. He was sitting in the old wooden rocker with the padded back, and had his slippers on. “No, 1 didn't go nowheres on Decoration day. I’m right glad 1 didn't over want to go to the races at In liunapolis. Once I listened a long time on the radio to them ears roarin’ by. I could almost smell the dust and l got plumb wore out. “Seems like every year the races make* a few more graves for someone to carry flowers to and to cry over. ’Young men, they alius are. Well, maybe if I was a young man myself I’d feel different. “My folks is mostly buried away off, but I ran see all the places 'most ] as good os if I were there. My mother I lays on the side of the prettiest hill. | They’s two tall white shafts there ]
■jpjpibaws!
A general view of the Morris Dam in San Gabriel Canyon, Azusa, Calif., which is the new. t link in a mighty chain of laic and aqueducts that will join i uthern California to the Colorado River. It was dedicated by feriner President Herbert Hoover, who is shown in insert making dedicatory address.
Tired of Being a Princess?
A recent photo of Princess Alexis Mdivani (inset), the f i num I’”' 1 "» and a divorce w expected to follow.
