The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 June 1934 — Page 4
9
JUST ARRIVED Grass Rugs for the Porch Imported Grass Rug's, with beautiful stenciled patterns, green, tan, blues. 4’ x T 6’x9’ Grass Itug k ee («rass Rug $1.29 Windows $1.79 I.AIMJK ASSOIM MI N I TO ( HOOSK FKOM. S. C. PKEVO COMPANY
Wreckage Of Plane
NOIHKOF FLBMC SALE OF PERSON \L PROPERTY STATE OF INDIANA, COUNTY OF PUTNAM, SS: In thr Putnam Circuit Court, April Term, 1934. In Re: Estate of William S. Collins, deceased. Orville Collins, Administrator. Estate No. 7ti26. Notice is hereby Riven that the undersigned, administrator of the estate of William S. Collins, deceased, will offer for sale, at public auction, at the late residence of -ail decedent, in Warren Township, in said county niid state, on Friday, the 15th day of June, 1934, the personal property of said estate, consisting of all household furniture and farmiiiR implements of said decedent. Said sale to begin at 2:00 o’clock p. m. Terms: Cash. ORVILLE COLLINS, Administrator. A. L. Evens, Auctioneer. Frank Mitchell, Clerk. It
ANN ARBOR BOASTS OF NAME NOT PI PLICATED IN WORLD ANN ARBOR, (UP) — Tiie name \nn Arl" r is distinctive to this city alone. N"who e ,n the world is there another Ann Arbor. No food or merhandise bears this name as a trade mark. Ann Arbor is original. Mail comes from even official Washington addressed to “Ann Harbor,” or illiterates may write “Anarbor,” or “Anarber,” but still Ann Arbor gets its mail. Postal guides list but one Ann Arbor. (iazeteers, encyclopedias, atlas tables, dictionaries and maps subslan1 iate the pffstal information. Travelers and research workers who explore unknown territoiy never have established another Ann Arbor us far as ■an be determined. There are eight Detroits, 11 Diamonds, 7 Cubas, a docen Bostons, 33 Buffalos, 25 Clevelands and other names in like numbers. JJut Ann Arbor, like San Francisco and New
Bailsman Out At Frankfort
FORMER GREENCASTLE COACH 19 LOOK INC FOR ANOTHER POSITION
iumwmu.''
Stripped of its covering by a thickly wooded section of th ■
flames, the bare he leton of the pa -eng r plane lay in a twisted heap in
Catskill Mountain , whete seven persons wtie cnrru
carried to their d aths.
York, is one of a few cities not duplicated. Even New York is partiallj duplicated in New York .Mills. This name appears in the postal lists for New York and Minnesota. The first word of the name, “Ann,’ may form the first three letters of the name of a number of cities but it does not stand alone as the first word of a double name. There is Annarose in Texas, Annawan in Illinois, A linear in Nebraska, Annamaria in Florida, Anna in f-ur states, and Annapolis in three.
n ■" •Itiam Howl, . now deadr«B| the wivC8 of the ttatukn and their
- •! ti d with itmg the citj
, . ,, “arbor, which history records, al-
one-time slog.m, “Th re is <uily one
Ann Arbor.” Some 25 years ago a I thm h crudely constructed, was a c mpetition was tarted by the then spot of lieauty and a resting place for
t in a go d e two w >men, the only women for
slogan for the city.
Dr. Howley’s idea was selected as the best. He was quite elated. The idea caught and the town adopted the phrase. Business men had their stationery imprint, 1 with the slogan. Merchandise produced here was i stamped with the slogan. “Ann Arbor" takes its name from
miles arcund.
CHEVROLET'S mweat cmation id Iwie f
DEALER ADVERTISEMENT
/CHEVROLET proudly present* ^ the new Sport Sedan as the most beautiful model ever built by any manufacturer of low-priced cars. On a long chassis embodying Chevrolet’s combination of exclusive features— fully-enclosed Knee-Action, an 80-mile-an-hour, 80-horsepower engine, cable-controlled brakes, and all the rest—is mounted a body that combines full five-passenger capacity, exceptional luggage space, and more de luxe touches than we have space to tell about. If appearance and convenience come first with you, and you wish to stay in the low-price field —here, beyond a doubt, is your car.
mw'Jwlttii bodtf type Jive paviencjeii Jmiiilied in the de twee memnen. and ecimpped with a a mad ApactonA d/ieamline t/iunh built in at the newi
CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT. MICHIGAN Compan CknroUti low ioliimtd print and n.y C. M. A. C. Irrmt. A Crnrral Mmon I'alii*
pEOPLF. w ith an eye for handsome lines will admire the way the spacious trunk merges into the body lines. And make no mistake, this streamlined trunk is a decidedly practical feature. It holds enough for a cross-continent tour, and speciallydesigned locks make it tamper-proof.
L. & H* CHEVROLET SALES Inc. N. Jackson St. Phone 346 Greencastle
FRANKFORT, Ind., June 13. — Frankfort high school was without a basketball coach today, it liecame def- | initely known following an announce-! ment last night by W. E. Bausman.l for the last three years athletic di- j rector and coach here, that he had been refused a new contract by the ! city school board. Although rumors have been numer-! nus and varied angles on the coaching ' situation here, nothing definite could l>e learned due to the fact that the school Iniard has made no announce-1 ment concerning Bauseman’s status' with the Frankfort schools and has! lonw-d that any action has lieen taken ■ one way or another, other than to admit that Hausman had not received a 1 contract. •Bailsman was told he had "better start Us,king for another job” one week after the regional tournament at Lafayette in which Frankfort lost to Lebanon in the finals, he said last night. At the time Bausman said he was given to understand that if he failed to get a contract elsewhere, he would l>e given a place in the Frankfort school system. Placing little hope on this offer, he opened negotiations for another position and when cpiestioned last night, would not deny that he had signed a contract elsewhere for the coming season, hut refused to say where the new job was. The return of Everett N. Case, ru- ' morel persistently here following the close of the last hardwood season, has i been considered practically a certainty by those professing to be “in the know," but board members emphatically stating that they are the only ones who know what is transpiring, have, thus far, denied that action toward that end has been taken.
Oxnain To Join In Continental Tour Conducted By Eddy
President And Family To Sail June 18; Will Travel In Europe Till September Bailluc fioin Uucbec on th'- Empress of Brilaln June sixteenth. President and Mrs. (4. Bioml'-y Oxnani and Robert Oxnain will leave for Europe, wh*re the party will jpeml the summer la touring both in England ami on the Continent. Joining the American Seminal group, which is conducted by Sherwood Kddy. in 'London, the president and hD party will spend gome time in following the program set up for ihe seminar group l>y Lord Astoraml Toynbee hall. This program will include Interviews with Prime Minis- ■ ei Uimsey MacDonald, George Bernard Bhaw, and shout thirty oth'r British notables. The seminar party will he th- guests of the Dean of Canterbury at Canterbury later in ihe stay In England. From England, Dr. Oxnatn will go to Germany, where, "an attempt will he made to study prep'M day U'r many In her several aspects." After he visit in Germany, the presid'nt wiU leave for Russia, travelling by way of Finland. The stay in Russia will include stop-oiers in I>eiiiiigrad, Moscow, aud the Important^ rural rrcions. A brief slop In War.aw, Poland, will he next on the trip after baling completed th" Russian visit. Vienna ami Munich are listed on the route i he presid'nt will follow. Following the stay in Munich, the pa.ity will v Lsl| The Passion Play at Oberammergau. IStopping in Geneva. Switzerland for the Institute for International Relaiions conference, the president will complete the last lengthened stay In any locality. After the conference, Dr. Oxnam and his family will In the guests of Dr. Ilaus Grip nliiKcr and his father *ln Freiburg in Baden. Germany. Travelling by way of Paris and London, the president will sail for the l nltcd S ates on tip Empress ol Britain, arriving on the campu. about September 5.
' NUT1GB DF ADMINISTRATION
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been ap]x>uited by the Judge of the Circuit Court of Putnam County, State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of William S. Collins, late of Putnam County, deceased 1 . Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Orville Collins, Administrator. June 6, 1934. Attorney, Albert E. Williams. Cause No- 7626. John W. Herod, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court. \ * 6"JR
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COMING
thi us day it mim SYLVIA SIDNE! in “THIRTY DA PRINIESS*
NOTRE OF SHERIFFS REAL ESTATE By virtue <>f a certifsl decree to me riireited fa« of the Putnam Circuit Os nam County, Indiana, in 14463, wherein the Lodrf Stock I^nd Bank is I/mnip A. Ray and (’hitf| are defendants, requiring the sum <>f one thouAmd r dollars and fifty-f ur .54) with interest on ad costs, I will expose st the highest bidder on f 23, 1934, between thei A. M. and 4:00 P. M of „ tlic d nr of the Court Hcastle, Putnam County, 1 rents nnd profit - for i exceed seven (?l jv following described ;«l Putnam County, state of wit: T • outhwe.'t qi'i# southeast ipiarter of» ship 12 noith, ramrt < V ing 35.51 acres, m"re«*( If sue : rents anil r^ sell foi a sufficient -t* sail decree, interest,«vf r nt the same time smi pi« public sale the fee>:nifkrcal estate, or so mud may he necessary to «. decree, interest, and to he made with'« ac f ever from valuation °ri laws. IN WITNESS WH hereunto set my hand. (lay of May, ^ Sheriff of f’ 11 "’'' 1 Sutherlin i for Plaintiff-
BANNER
WANT A#
NOTIC
Pay Vo® telephone a on or before 15th of e acl) month'
Greene** 11 * 1 Indiana A Telephone f 0
