The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 June 1934 — Page 3

LASSIFIED ADS ! 0ur F 'ying Envoy

DAILY BANNKR. 6RFENCASTLE, INDIANA. MONDAY. JUNE 18. 1934,

_Fnr

,, R S aU; Flru Rural N w Yo* , Hl , n Setil Potatoes, fl.20 a rr |4 McOaimhey. Russellno piwit^ Fincastle. 16-2p

• have two more hatches of baby ' J630 p‘‘ r hundred. “Center 4 . cTiieks”, are known for their ^ j.) ( | a y old chicks reasonable, j'rtiur order colled today. Tele1020. (’enter Point Hatchery, ^ point, Indiana. Ifbdlts. five room house; change fi' 1 ' s,rla fi er house and . r^ nce . 310 West Liberty, Jji ;,,p SALE 50-lb front icer Oak Orator, $5.75: 1-bunier Perfec<*75- .leff'ie.s, Berry SC Iji

•R SALE: Majestic table radio, ., new Inst October. Must he L fall ()9»-K. lp AI.E: Complete Beauty Shop ti cheap. Reason for selling: in, .4. Write or call at Coduty Sh< p, 1001 S. Indiana

18-20-22-3p

! ' ng 8hil . ,p * d * >ac h to Luton, England, i in.lustries, it Is believed here,

i ' Several'l^^ 1 , I J; >l>anese competition has contract1 brouifht to Arn^rl ater , hP trunk Wa ' i , ' 11 ( ’ anadian ‘■’'ports of rayon and low-! u-b, • I ' caan,i ev, ' ,,tu ‘ il| yto rubber products to the British West , ' ' L " fi®* wtnaine since. Indies, for instt , With Britain's

: ~ | applying ineasup

BRl I Ish-.i \p wese trApe I " Mt MAY All) CANADA ! ° 1 7 AWA > Out. (UP)—The trade I T 0 ! 1>etw, * f -" Britain and Japan may I indirectly htdp a number of Canadian

Nazi Probe Witness

to restrict corope* i

tition «»f Japanese 1 in the roar- j kfts of the 'British c olonies, Canada’s I trade oppoitunitio * in such markets ^ will improve, it i believed. Ab ut thi*ee yt*:irs aj?o Canada

New World’s Fair at N" r ;ht

RSAI-E: Pine boxes, 10 cents Cnider's Wall Paper & Paint , l«-2p HOW CARD -Colors and brushes Snider’s. ^ 2 P fOK SALE: 100 lb. Ice Box, $5; jer; Kitchen cabinet, $8. Thomp's, Cotmnercial Pla< , e. Ip OR SALE: Refrigerator, 100-lb. acity, front icer, $7.00. h’umiture shangr. East Side Square. Phone

It

—Wanted— WANTED: Second hand Simmons fie lied. Phone 400-L. 18-3t IVANTED: Experienced la ly to do. nsework. Address Box W. Banner 16-2i) WANTED: Any kind of dead stock II 278. Greencastle. We pay al" arees. John Wachtel Co. eor WtN'TED—To hear from owners .miall farms, prefer five to ton ■e: good six <ir seven room house: Xtrio lights; improved road, etc. We cash price in first letter. S. A. mnely, Clay City, Ind. l. r )-3t -MiscelIaneo»--PERMANENTS: Fredric Spiral 'll Realistic ( roqiuqnole, $1.30 to n Our work guaranteed. Phone I II \ ,luut St. Mo-Thu-tf Everybody invited to Putnam counday at Cataract Falls, Sunday, 24. Banners must be displayed all ,ar- for free admission. These |iy ive ohtaine<| at Russellville, Ir- ’ b drug store, Roachdale; Smoke Wse. Clovendale; Hunter’s store, ftm re: Steward's Station, Bain ■'V; Drhbs Tire & Baittery shop, Mdrug-toiv. Clreencastle; McOam y tation, Mt. Merid.an. 18-»!t A'iN’OI NCEMRNT—1 have moved ; garage from 20 South Jackson W*t to Ml Bloomington street. 24trservice Hill’s (Johnson) Garage. ^ 473-Y. Ip. TV PET1LLO M INS; l, ^AI. CAR H AS TROUBLE ^dy Pttillo of I/os Angeles won Nature lO tnile race at Jungle speedway “t Rockville Sunclay " llJO n, heating a field incluu'ing Mips, another P.'icific coast drivLuri Rose, who ifilaced .second at ‘Mpolis, a nd outstanding drivers the mil idle west. 'k also won a four-lap Italian with Rex Mays while ("de elimination races were won Mouri Rixse, a n<l Clay .itatilerley. '‘aruken to the track by Howard Greencastle garage owner, de- ' ri ^ lr ' n,l> r trouble in morning '(band was not entered in any of “tares. ,f W.ER INTERVAL TIME r^TlN, Tex. (UP)—An enlarged 1 tinpus with greater disbetween huildfngs has forced diversity of Texas to add two it, ‘' to th ( , fi v<1 interval J^ r,y “bowed pupil s to get from m cl »»8 to another. '"'i'F, (tp FINAL SETTLEMENT ., «>K ESTATE J:.i“ hereby given to the cred P rs !in 'l legatees of Catherine . r 1 deceased, to appear in the cJ'' 1 rir ‘ , uit Court, held at ^ l l f '. Indiana, on the 30th day *!u T’ 'd' 4 ’ an<1 “’ how < ' ausp i >f any. *iu .!* f inal Accounts ' ****** of said decedent hir. approved; and said O' notified to then and there heirship, and receive ' hdnhutive shares. Hi s’ f n,p < ' ,erk of said court, v !r,!; y of 'r*’ ,! ' 34 - tsit ll, ' r "d. Clerk Putnam Cir- ^ J Murphy, Atty. n-2t

William C. Bullitt, first U. S. Am- , bassador to Soviet Russia, shown I climbing from the cockpit of his plane after first flight over Moscow. | Owing to paucity of transportation /' facilities in the Soviet, the airplane ' was sent from the U. S. for the usa «f the Ambassador. MRS, LENA POOR, i LINTON, OIKS; ILL SUV UR A |. \V I'l'KS CLINTON, Ind., Jum. is m,.,. I/ona Poor, wife of ( M I 1 ,, i-, |rp n . eral manager of the .\ nl,'m Indiana Power Company, die ,.;, r |y Sunday morning after several vi k ’ illness. B ■' the hu bai elude two daughter. \I Dorothy at home, and Mrs. M nirice Smuttuck ■of Charleston, W. Va.; on .n, Chester, at home; her iri.-hi , Mr Eli-/.a-lieth Tune of Carlisle. Ky., and one brother, Frank Choa lia t ef Pari , 111. Funeral services will lie at the Christian Church here To. day afternoon, to he followed by burial in Cin-

cinnati, O.

firsfewiS

pli

- m

IN MEMORY In memory of our darling mother, Franco Jeanetta Sutherlin, alio passr ed away three years ago June 17,

1931.

You cannot say; you mu-i nut say That h" is dead, she i. just away. With a cheery smile and a wave of the hand, She ha wandered into an unknown land, And left us dreaming how very fair It need must he, since she lingers there. So think of her loving on as dear. In the love of Ih re as the love of

here.

Think of her still as the same and

say,

She is not deal; he is just away. Sadly missed by husband, children and grandchildren.

‘ -M

m

New lighting marvels are cne of the 1 Chicago. This view was taken from moot impressive features to greet the COO-fcet level of the Sky Ride, crowds at the new World’s Fair in | looking south.

Disclosure that the German EmI bassy at Washington and the German Consulate at New York aided | the organization, known as the i “Friends of Germany,” in obtain1 ing motion pictures portraying life I under Chancellor Hitler in a favorable light was made by Reinhold j Walter, head of the organization, I thown as he testified before House

committee in Washington.

threatened with a flood f < Imap Japanese goods, instituted a heavy currency dumping duty. This and the depression has re luted Cunada-Japan trade about (10 per cent, hut has left Canada with a relatively large favorable balance. Exports, largely of grain, lumber and newsprint, run to ; bout $10,000,lido, and imports to

about $4,000,000 a year.

v - *V *<41

A NCI UN I I'Rl Ms WORUD TRWFI.F.R MILFORD, la., (UP)—W. G. Alikins, collector of h< blooms, has among his pn . ions a trunk more than 100 yi n old, which has traveled more than 100,000 mile . In 1MO . «“ rty 'd’ Eli / • heth Spen y 'f I ul n, England, and was taken by In r to ( ilcutta, India. In 18‘J3 it \v taken on a round th' • world trip by her untie, William Sheppard. Twi n! \ two years later b ‘ took it with him to Afiica frost Cal-

cutta.

The fourth lengthy voyage of th"

trunk was made in 1807, when Frank ALBANY, N. Y. (LI V) — When Ainsworth, .1 ■ rndant if the or-.ji,,, national G. O. I mn ittee met rginal ixwner, took it with liim from jn ( hie igo recently uii.l select? i England to Can 1 la. He relumed toj Henry P. Fb teller as permanent England .taking the trunk along, and chairman of the party, the • ie was in 1895 set out for Canada again J ca st for millions of Kepuhlu an voter* from Uiveiqionl. The ship on which h" ' who had h >po<l that the batteixal elecha I booked pa-sage was wn eked, j |,hunt would throw away its blindei s

trunk went to the | ( 0 realize a new eiamomic era

a off Queenstown, ixmn horn.

temained for two The western G. O. P progressive: id cargo were raised whom ex-Senator George II. Mose timiP, the trunk lie* Juul once termed “sons of the wd

kingtland Macy

nperation of the G. C>. P. legislators in IXemtxTatic (1'O’. Herliert. Uehman’s

utility’ program, and. t >>f the bills were

12-(sunt ipublii labored untl 11

victorious

however an i tie' bottom of the Ireland whei> it years. The ship a: at the end of lie

has

"Dillinger Dead?'’

That John Ddlmger is dead and buried was the hint conveyed in tho dying whisper of Tommy CarrolR one of Dillingcr's lieutenants, wh* was fatally shot in police t™!* « Waterloo, Iowa. Carroll was with the Indiana badmaif when they shot their way ouh of federal net at Spider Lake, Wis.

jackasses”, were hostile to the en tern faction led by .lis<’ipliii"»i conservatives, Man ding past on every tenet favoring “big success.” Mild, slight looking, tall, is W King-dan . Macy, Hi-year-ol I New York s’ate Republican chairman imbued with an idealism strange enough in a isditician, particularly in an (‘astern G. O. P. leader Nine years ago, he slipped obscurely into politics, to “give it busint ss efficiency”, but his f*inkness In attacking members of hi> own paitv along with Democrats etirned h : m a r'’|nitation for acid integrty. Dist month, when Riqiublican party followers still refrained from eritirh m of the Roosevelt new ' Ual, the New | York loader did not hesitate to declare I ha.', “influences within the G 0. P. I cared little or not at all whether the | party remained successful, so long as they wen* subservient t opuhlic util1 ity interests.” | F r like President Roo ■veil. Macy i has I'ome out again ‘ the power dru t, I and 1 in fre<|iient blasts he a-cused | members of his own faction in the N. Y. legislature of hamstringing reg-i-'atory measures. He fought tenacious- ! f the nominetion . f an ' ' tidy | vlerk Ink ked by the utility h.Wre t In public speeches he denial*led co-

Speaking of the decline of the Republican party, Macy laments “that -irinir the pa.-: 10 years, the G- O. P. has steadily 1 . I public esteemby ignoring the piiit of the tim*' .” Scion of wealthy parents, whose forbears sailed the Nantucket waters inwhaling ship.-, “New Dealer” Chairman Macy went U> Harvard and after marrying head* a large chain of grocery shops From spices on I potatoes the future O. O. P. leader bought himself a seat on the stock exchange and traded on the floor “a few times”. Then |H>litics oftem'd its ■ioots and Mtacy felt its magnetism. But he had little faith with reactionary opposition. “A lea i r must realize that lie has an obvious duty to the public Iran* scemling mere jMlitical advantages, and a party must lx* hones to win confidence,” he : ai '. Small wonder then, tliat this political altruist ha alienated old time wheelhors's like Congressman J imes Wadsworth, H. Edmund Machold, GO. P. ijiower, an I numerous others who see in such renegade tactics the seeds -if rebellion. Small won er, too, that lilieral I! - publicans throughout the state ■•s' in V-T,. Hk. |ngi. d .■■i!henvi("rial candi■.ate t„ ov. rthrow the long I)i r«i cratic reign at AIlKiny. Political *d) 'Tver mo in Mary tie' only kind of G- O. P. easterner who can unite with the progressive west to reweld the par*, An I the sn 1 patters may find themselves force) to accept his |.*lonhip :ome day.

MRS. DALI. BEGINS NEY.ADA RF.SIDENUE PRIOR TO DIVORCE LAKE TAHOE, Cal., June 18, (UP) Mrs. Anna Roosevelt Dull and her two children arrived last night at the .-even room cottage on the Nevada shore of Lake Tahoe, .where she will reside six weeks before divorcing Curtis Dali, New York and Chicago broker. The only daughter of President and Mrs. Roosevelt wa ; fatigued by the transcontinental train ride and the 35-mile drive from Truckee, Cal., in the automobile of her attorney, Sam Platt. She would not grant an interview. Tho children, Anna Eleanor, 7 years old, “Sistie.” Mini Curtis Jr,, 4, “Huzzie," were suffering from slight colds. I hey jiaid little attention to the many Cys on the train and between Reno and Truckee set up considerable commotion. “Buzzie” wailed loudly. Tho car in which Mrs. Dali and the children were traveling was driven poshly in an effort to elude newspaper men, who mingled with 100 (■ wnsmea at the Tiuckee station. At one p 'int the ch mffeur drove the car iSb mile an Inur. “Don’t you know you have precious carp 1 with you'” Attorney Platt usk- ' 1 the chauffeur, who then slowed to 00 miles an hour. Three secret service operatives kept a careful watch over Mrs. Dali and the idiildren Admittedly, they feared some “crank” might attempt an abduct i n, or seek to injure the president's daughter and grandchilidren. Reno ■ fficials searched persons in the crowd at Truckee and scrutinized everyone closely. There was no unloward incident. I he tv idi nee is in Washoe county, of which Reno is the county seat. It was considered probable Mrs. Dali would obtain the divorce at Reno. Twenty miles distant, at Elks Point, Elliott Roosevelt, son of the president, established residence last summer t > permit his wife to divorce him at Miivlen.

Thi -on-atienal series of motion pictures, supplier! hv c.r Hairy O. \i"ler, show just how Prime Carnera l"-t thi- till

tr

Hai r. Eroni 'his punch, landed in the first roun . I'rimo later ad 1 itted he n< or iv. von Note hov Prime starts a left to Baer's body, Max count' ring with a right mash to he head. I’rimo falls, twisting his right foot. Caineru aid h. -prained the foot and wa thus handicapped

in the 11 mainder of the brawl.

1 hat s Daddy! —Jury Convicts

Helen Hammel and her brother, Allen, Jr,, are pictured with their mother in a Chicago courtroom, enacting a drama which helped to hiring the conviction of Allen R. Hammel, alias Burt Armstrong, on charges of embezzling funds from an express company. Summoned into court by state’s attorneys, who wore seeking to prove that tho defendant was Hammel and not Armstrong, as he claim d to b ■, the children saw the defendant and called him “Daddy”. A short time later the jury returned a guilty verdict

Prepare For Stralsosphere Flight

A. W. fit even.the Black Hill

(I' l^, with 1 iondehi ' m ar Rapid City, B. I