The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 June 1934 — Page 3

fHE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. FRIDAY, JUNE 15. 193^.

jjjappy Days Are Here Again!

Bass Season Opens Tomorrow Here’s your picture as you land tliat first Lip; one with tackle |(rom the Dobbs Store. FISHERMEN — SEE US FOR: . Artificial Bait, Rods, Ree4s, Minnow Nets, Minnow Buckets, ■Lines. Floaters, Stringers, Hooks, Tackle Boxes, Sinkers, Baron |Rind, and all kinds of special Flies. Flic most complete stock of fishing tackle in the city. You can’t go wrong at Dobbs.

NORTH SUM-: SQUARE

GREEN< \'l I E, INK.

iSSIFIED ADS

—For Sale— IKK SALE at Hamilton’s Honk Saturday morning at 0:30 Irk. T ' Women of the Catholic Jch. 14-21

MORE TAXES DUE

qualified livestock farmers through their Production Credit Aasociations, which are units of the farm credit administration of Louisville and of which there are 12 in Ohio, 10 in Indiana, 12 in Kentucky and 10 in Tennessee. The Creencastle association, serves the counties of Hendricks, fountain, Vigo, Vermillion, Morgan, Hoone, Parke, Montgomery, Clay and Putnam. “However, forehandedness in arranging finances is as essential to summer and fall livestock operations us planting and growing the food supply," states Mr. Eamshaw. “Never before could farmers finance their production program at 6 per cent interest per year, which is the present cost of money through Production Credit Associations. Rome borrowers, le vever, have been disap- | pointed that the association could not | imply accept the loan application | and pi-s the money out over tho j counter the same day. Borrowers ' should allow ten days to two weeks : f r securing loans. Plan ahead and | tart arranging for money in time to j allow for handling necessary details, I sti the Production Credit Association | may have the money available on the date when it is required. Interest, of course,begins only when the money actually i- advanced to the borrower, so he lo-es nothing by securing commitment of the loan in plenty of time. | Furthermore, in eases where funds | are required at intervals throughout I a period of perhaps several months, j a budgeted loan may he arranged in which specified sums are advanced at stated periods. This enables import ant savings, dnee interest is paid on each installment only ns the money is actually advanced to the borrower.” Every county in the four states of Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee is served by a Production Credit Association, these organizations being under the supervision of the Production Credit Corporation of I/OUl'sville, Ky. The office of the Oreencnstle Production Credit Association is located in the First National hank building, at Greencastle.

I)!: SVI.K: Ozark loud speaker, fgarden benches. John’s Barber Walnut street. It tb S \l,l Yellow resistant late luge and Mango plants. O. M. pi Jackson, Ip II DELTA KAPPA rummage Satunl y morning at 8 o’clock in ^■ild Kiogor room, south sMs of 14-2t —For Rent— lli PENT- Two furnished rooms lint housekeeping, downstairs, lead Anderson street. Phone 12-15-2t |Hi PENT: Furnished lower light Vk'epmg rooms. Call The Uan-14-2p Dlt RENT—Furnished rooms, |fa t Washington street. 1f>-2t —Wanted— |.AVI ED: Passengers to share ex - f auto trip to Chicago. Reas- !'■ Phone ftM or *22. It [ANTED To hear from owners "all farms, prerfer five to ten ► d -iv <>r seven mom house; pic lights; improved road, etc. f -h price in first letter. S. A ply, Clay City, Ind. 16 [AV ED: Any kind of dead stork " '278 Greencastle. We pay al g 1 *- John Wachtel Co. eo« I—Miscellaneoua—

I'f Paint P'ef paint,

IPs.

Asphalt-asbestos, no fill cents per gallon Ifi-lp

^t'lER HIGHLANDS, Putnam ['>■' Summer Resort. Cottages . all ,,r write for reservations. | hl ' boating, Swimming. Com - ,r V on grounds. Free entrance.

fi-n-ir^o-dp

ffDWooD: Dance Saturday and F*.' nights. Music by Sod Poster night; Boh White Sunday

It.

INDIANAPOLIS, June lfi.-Tn preparation for assisting taxpayers in the filing of July gross income tax returns, field agents of the state gross income tax and store license iivision will gather in four district meetings during the next two weeks, it was announced here today by C. A. Jackson, director of the division. The taxpaying period extends from July 1 to July 15. The first meeting will be held at Richmond Tuesday, June 19 ami will be attended by field agents in eastcentral Indiana; on June 21, field agents in the northern part of the state will meet at South Bend, the southern district meeting will he held at Terre Haute, June 29, and the final meeting, to be conducted by agents in the central section of the state, will be held at Indianapolis June 27. Prior to previous gross income taxpaying periods, Jackson snid, field agents from all parts of the state have met in Indianapolis. The change was made to the district plan, he asserted, because of the saving to the state in transportation expenses and also because lietter individual instruction is possible in smaller meetings. All meetings will he attended by departmental executives, including Jackson, W. F. Rightor Jr., bend of the field service, and members of the legal department. Gross income tax returns are required in July from all persons or firms owing tax of more than $10. All others are being urged by the tax division to mak the quarterly payment rather than defer the payment until the end of the year, because the money will he m re quickly available for schools and because, it was pointed out, quarterly payments are easier for most taxpayers than a larger annual amount.

ELKS TO MEET AT ANDERSON

URGE EARLY tPPLICATION FOR LIVESTOCK LOANS

Plan are complete for the annual state convention of Elks here Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurwlay, June 19, 20, 21. The convention opens Tuesday with a state golf tournament with 75 entries to date, for attrartive cash prizes. Many other features are scheduled for the opening day, including a stag picnic. The business sessions open Wednesday morning, with State President Joseph Clark of Indianapolis Lodge No. 12, presiding. At 11 a. m. the annual memorial address will he given by Hinkle Hays of Sullivan. A tour of the city of Anderson, ritualistic contest for the Joseph T. Fanning cup, trap shooting contest for cash prizes, women’s theater and bridge parties, and a big dance at the Green Lantern dancing pavilion will close the day’s activities. Election of next year’s state officers is for this date. On Thursday, June 21, the business sessions will Ik 1 continued at the Elks home at 9 a. m. At this time the convention city for next year will he sole ted. At 1 p. m. the hid parade will get under way, with many big floats, ten bands and drum corps and hundreds of marcher- in line. Advance registrations indicate that 2,i8M) Elks and their wives will lie in atten lance. Following the parade, a ladies theater and dinner party, the band and drill team contests, a stag picnic and the big dance at the Green Lantern close the day’s program. GOLF TOURNEY SCHEDULE Drawings for the first married and single rouple tourney of the sea son at the Northwood golf course was announced Friday. The tournament

Imish Stainkr’s.

cents per quart. 15-lp

* rro Polo’s Travels! An InterT Story Regarding the Famous P l ’‘ r Will iBe Found in The "" :in Weekly, the Magazine Miut,.,! With NEXT SUNDAY’S Ugo herald and exam-15-lp E at Banner Club Saturday 'lusic b v Midnight Ramblers. 15 cents. It v, l House paint, $2.10 gallon '■ 12.35). Same quality would r, ° 'o $3 no elsewhere. Snider’s. 15-lp

"Make arrangements early for the money you will need to buy feeders and stockers this summer and fall,” is the advice of J. W. Eamshaw, sec-retary-treasurer of the Greencastle Production Credit Association, to prose petvie livestock buyers. Already the advance guard of the seasonal run of native and western ewes is appearing at the markets. With local rains throughout the states bringing on them food crops and pastures many farmers are looking forward to stocking up with moneymaking ‘woolies,’ rememl>ering the comfortable profits produced during the past several seasons by those two-crop animals. Both wool and lambs have been on a profitable price basis, while the incidental gains from the farm value of the manure and through the utilization of roughage which otherwise is wasted are import-

ant factors also.

“Money for buying Stocker ewes— and for all other livestock production operations,” states Mr. Karn^aw, "is readily available to experienced

sr 35

and

TO

I CHICAGO

AND

RETURN Every Day During the

WORLD’S FAIR

Tickets good in coaches and Pullman Cars. Return limit IS days. Reduced Pullman Fares.

ALL-EXPENSE TOURS

ON SALE EVERY DAY These tours include Railroad and Pullman Transportation, Hotel accommodations in Chicago, Admission tickets to the Fair, Sightseeing tour of Chicago, Twilight trip on Lake Michigan, Taxi Fares, etc. For rrmervatlonl, or folder, describing these tours, cell M. S NEWOENT Agent Grerm »«le. Indiana

MONDN ROUTE

FORD PRICES REDUCED

Effective Friday, June 15, Prices on Ford V-Eight Passenger Cars, Trucks and Commercial Cars Are Reduced .$10 to $20. These Reductions Represent New Low Prices on 1934 Models, as There Have Been No Ford Price Increases This Year.

FOIJI) V-8 l > ASSKN(;i:it ( AKS (112 Wheelbase) v WITH STANDARD Wl'lll DELUXE KQI IPMKN'I EQI IBMEN'I Tudor Sedan $52(1 , 4 $, r )«0 I dupe $505 $545 Fordor Sedan $575 $615 Victuria $600 "Cabriolet . $590 Roadster $525 Phaeton ” $550 Tltese prices remain unchanged.

FORI) V-8 TIUK KS AND ( OM\IFR< IAI, CARS Commercial Car Chassis—112-ineh w heel base $350 Truck Chassis—131-inch wheel base $485 Truck Chassis 157-inch wheel base $510 Stake Truck (closed cab) 131-iiu h wheel base $050 Stake Truck (closed cab) 157-iiuli wheel base $715 IN ADDITION TO THE ABOVE, PRICES A RE ALSO REDUCED ON OTHER COM MERCIAL CAR AND TRUCK TYPES FROM $10 TO $20. “ALL PRICES F. (>. It. DETROIT.”

FORD MOTOR COMPANY

will be conducted under match play rules and elimination rounds will he for nine holes with the finals consist ing of eighteen holes. Preliminary rounds are to start immediately with the finals being played not biter than a week from Sunday. The schedule: Brown vs. Zeis; Vermillion vs. Stewart; Edition son vs. Hintz; Bryan vs. Murnano.

Baseball \t < lovekdai.k Cloverdale Cuba will play the Bedford Red fv>x, Sunday at 2:30 o’clock at Morrison park in Cloverdale. The Cubs will have in their lineup the Quincy stars, Sackett and Greenwood. The battery for Cloverdale will be Williamson anti Ray, while F. I^mon anti Gates will compose the Bedford Imttery,

HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP RACK IN AMERICA TOD \Y NEW YORK, June 15, (UP)—The heavyweight championship of the world was back in America today, borne on the trashing crescendo of Max Raer’s ilynamite fists. Boxing has the spectacular figtirv it has needed since Dempsey’s t'sty. The new champion is a slugger. In 2:16 of the eleventh round of last night's fight, Maxie Baer of California smashed his way to a vicious technical knockout over the unptipulnr Prime Camera of Italy, anti with the final battering blow, heavyweight boxing was restored to the status it held in the haylcon days of Johnson, Willard, Dempsey and Tunney. The sport today has a champion wdtom none denies.

MURK II VINDFll \T BIRTH OK KAMKI) NR A

ROOSEVELT SIGNED RECOVERY ACT HILL YEAH AGO TODAY

BANNER WANT ADS PAY

WASHINGTON, June 16 (ITT')— A year ago today the weather was warm anil sticky, with Washington under a blanket of humidity. Clerks in the huge Commerce Department building were working listlessly- all except a busy few who as the minute hand crept toward noon were writing the first words in a new chapter of American history. Tlie NR\ was horn at 11:55 a. m. A few minutes later wrird that President Roosevelt had signed the Industrial Recovery Act spread through the pigeon-hole offices on the fourth floor where, with a handful of workers, this great experiment was getting under way. Tlie NKA was a reality! TTiere were 65 persons on the NBA payroll at the time. Now there are

2,000.

A year ago wealthy industrialist, the college professor, the economic expert, the trained technician - all bent on prying the country loose from depression, worked frenziedlv in the little cubby-holes assigned them. Now the organization has spread over the third and fourth floors, a cooling system has been put in for Administrator Johnson’s office, (he division heads work in seclusion with secretaries and outer-offices to shield them. Bi* by bit the organization grew. X floor plan for locating offices so that some liaison could lie maintained between offices doing interlocking work was drawn up. Johnson and his staff went to their suite on the fourth floor. The industrial and labor advisers were ranged alongside them. The

research and planning division was just across the corridor. Tlie personnel increased. Soon there wore 185 on the staff, then 350, then 880. The thou .md mark was passed ami still it kept mounting. The NKA overflowed back down to the third floor. Sixteen hundred employes! Then on up to the pro out figure. Ami still the NKA hums with activity. It is not the same as in those first few weeks. But it is a concentrated tlrive, organized anil times! to a greater degree of efficiency load ing no one knows exactly where. supreme conn rucks WHITING MAYOR ELECTED INDIANAPOLIS, June 15, (UP)— A long-standing fight to oust Mayor Thomas S. Boyle of Whiting was set tied in the state supreme court yesterday when it held he had been legally elected in the (929 election. The supreme court upheld a decision of the Lake superior court which held that Boyle hod legally lieen elected despite a recount which showed that Francis D. McNamara won the election. The fight to keep Boyle from serving his second term started after the 1929 election. The canvassing Imard’s .aunnuheement ail Hoyle had lieen

elected.

an I one-quarter of a TurkisH pound 1 . (A Turkish pound equals about 80 cents.) Silver money has Isan out of circulation since the Republic, shortly after c.nniing into power, invalidated the old Ottoman currency. The government repeatedly had announced their intention of carrying out this monetary reform, ami even a new minting law had Urn adopted not long ago, but, owing to shortness of silver stocks, its realization had to be postponed. An amendment to the silver bill, which the Administration has just presented in the National Assembly, authorizes the Finance Ministry to issue silver coins of nominal value of ll>,(HM),(KM) Turki h (lountls. One-half is to lie put into circulation imnusHately, and the balance at a later date. Present stinks of silver in the hands of the government amount to 33 tons. Twenty-six tons were collected by calling in the obsolete silver coins of the former regime ami seven were bought in the British market. It is expected that further purchases will precede the actual minting.

4-H dub News The Kind Young Sewers 4-H chili met at the Vocational building Thursday at 2 o'clock. The meeting was rallcvl to order by the president, Alice Woods. The afternoon was spent sowing on towels. The program was in j charge of Della King. TURKS TO H \VE SILVER MONEY ISTANBUL (UP) Silver money is to reayxpear in Turkey soon. This is welcome news to natives anti foreigners alike, as the Turkish pound notes, dirty anti tom, present a danger to health- , There will lie coin; of one, one-half

MARRIAGE ON DARE SERIOUS WATERBURY, Conn. (UP)—Marriage, even on a dare, is not to be taken trivially, ruled Superior Court Judge Etlwin C. Dickenson in refusing to annul the marriage of Robert F. Davis, who claimed he wed because his girl friend “dared him to” while they were on an automobile ride.

EAT HOME COOKED FOOD AT THE The Old Home Inn On U. S- Highway No. 36 5 miles east of Bainhridge Fried Chicken Dinner 50c Country Ham Dinner 40c