The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 July 1936 — Page 3
THE DAILY BANNER, QREENCASTiE, INDIANA THT’RSDAY, .li r.Y no,
—Miscellaneous—
PINEAPPLE 3 ?; n \ 25c Del Monte Peas C j " 15c Del Monte Coffee Vm 25c Pineapple Juice 2 ‘ — 25c Sardines 3 ° v *; 25c DEL MONTE SPINACH c^5Sc, c «"12c ApricotSp«rJd-whoie cin 25c Asparagus M D 0 ^ te 25c Corn Cin 12c Apricots ^ 2 c.n. 33c TOMATOES D * 1 M """ 2 c — 23c Cherries 2 ' 39c Royal Ann27c Fruit Salad 2 c — 33c Pears u -,2 c-39c
HV. 25c
15c Del Monte Coffee Vm 25c 25c Sardines M D 0 ' n \, 3 25c >PINACHc" l s,,c.»12c
FOR SAI^E Console style V’ictrola in walnut oalrinet: in goo«I condltion, $4. 212 east Franklin St. FOR SALE: Ei^ht room garage, workshop and garden, reasonable. 701 Crown street. FOR SALE: 19.:0 Ford sedan, good condition. $110 00. Pingleton. West Jacob street. FOR SALE Extra good lambs. Two miles south of Mt
dian. Lester Terry.
KEEP in mind Annual Picnic and July JO. Ill and Auy
the Cloverdale Home-Coming, 1st. 27-29-30-3Ls
POLICE THREE YEARS LATE ! TOLEDO, (UP) "Where’s the holdup?” demanded three police squads are they answered an omer- ' gency call. "That vas three years ago.” Mrs. F. J. Krill replied. Then she explained that she saw two men whom she recognized as the bandits who held up her husband three years ago. They escaped before police ar-
1 lived.
FOR SALE: One bom 21' x .'10' Address Sam Lloyd, west Walnut street road. 29-2p
Oel Sq. -Jr _ Monte Can Wc 2 c.n. 33c 2 c,n ‘ 23c
Take a drive to the Lee Robinson farm', 2 miles east of Fillmore and see how Prime Electric Fence holds his shoals with a single wire. Sold by Lois A. Zeiner, Fillmore. 28-30-21
CORN
Del Monte Vacuum Packed
2 c * n * 25c
FOR SALE: One 4 year old horse, one 2 year old horse also one smooth mouth horse. Walter S. Campbell. South End. 28-30-21 FOR SALE: Frying chickens, 1.12, miles south of Cement Plant. Mrs. 1 Curl Hartnagle. 30-2ts
2 ji; r b 23c Tobacco
Peaches M om« 3^:* 25c Fruit Salad M ™« c *„ 10c Pears Mol ti cZV 9c Olives j q .‘; 29c BABY FOOD 3 c - 25c P-Nut Butter 2 ^ r b 23c Tobacco IZ" Tin 10c Bonita Fish 2 c.ns 25c Mustard 10c PINEAPPLE k"- 2 ell. 37c
EXTRA FLAVOR Taste it today! You’ll love "Peak of Flavor”
A&P BREAD
Twist Loaf 2 L 0 °r9c Raisin Bread 10c TUNE IN KATE SMITH EVERY TUE. OR THUR.,’ WBBM, 5:30 P. M.
iH.QMfi mAl MARKETS
Branded Beef Sale
FOR SALE: Real coon hound pups. Males $2.00 each. Charles Wood. Fox Ridge. 30-Ip FOR SALE La Belle oak refrigerator. refinished, front icer, holds 7. r i pounds, $3.75. Furniture Exchange, east side Square, Phone 170-L. 30-Ip FOR SALE: Pure bred Poland China Oilts. bred for full farrow. O. M. Thomas, Morton. 30-2ts.
FOR SALE OR RENT: One International hay baler, rent 50e per ton also three good used wagons. Walter S. Campbell. 29-30-Aug. l-3t
ROUND OR SIRLOIN STEAK
Swiss Roast
Chickens
Dressed Haddock Ocean Perch Fillets CHUCK ROAST GROUND BEEF
Round Bone
Shoulder
Choice Cuts of Beef Fresh O Patties or Loaf ^
31c - 21c Lb 29c Lb 10c Lb. 17c Lb 15c Lb. 27c
A & P FOOD STORES
BKL\hS IT* PLANTATION OF FAMOUS .IITKIST JTW ORLEANS < UP * One hunf an ' 1 fifty years old and possesa 'cjciful history, the planta11,1 'i'" "d" Chief Justice Edward Wluti’ will be broken up inPiabilitation farms, r in has been purchased | Ithe F. q.-ral government from the V of •h,» late Mrs. White, who 1 i" Ih l and will be broken up!
into many small farms for nun and women taken from the depleted and waste farm land in North Louisiana and other sections. The plantation home, an example of American architecture of the 1780s. will remain untouched as a shrine to the great American jurust. who was appointed to tne high post by President Cleveland. BANNER ADS GET RESULTS
FOR SALE White Rock frys. Staten Owens. 203 Wood street. Phone 504-K 29-2t
—For Rent—
BRITAIN ‘FINDS’ MALAYAN ( I TV AFTER 10 YEARS ! SINGAPORE 'UP' The lost city Yong Peng, inhabited by 5,00 Chinese, i and situated in th" midst of the 1 Malayan jungle, was found by a British government off.: ml while flying ! over the district. The official, who was employed in the Land Office of the native Malay state of Johore, saw a laige settlement in the heart of the jungle, which he did not recognize Next day he drove to it. and t< his amazement J discovered that it was the lost city I , of Yong Peng. The government was unaware of the existence of the town, although it has been a thriving agricultural center for nearly 10 years. The inhabitants, who are Chinese, work as rubber planters on an area of more than 10,000 acres. They have built the town as their headquarters, and provided it with all the amenities 1 of a native civilization i "Suburban villages" also were found around Yong Peng, and wets' in fact a series of virtual republics hidden away in the Riitish protected state of Johore. all working peace-
ably.
, The area is only 20 miles from a main road, but lies in a region little I frequented by Englishmen.
CHICK H ATCHING NEARS PLANE OF EXACT SCIENCE
EXPERIMENTS MAY ADD MILLIONS TO INCOME OF POIT.TPY MEN WASHINGTON. (UP) Savings of millions of dollars annually will accrue to poultrvmen if experimental work by government scientists develops as expected. The experiments have be< n eon ducted by H (i Barott, agriculture department poultry technologist, over a period of 15 years and are said to have resulted in finding the optimum of favorable conditions under which eggs should be hatched. For years. Barott has worked in his extensive laboratory at the Bcltsville. Md., experimental farm with “calorimeters” in which he could measure exact aii conditions the amount of humidity, gaseous air eontents and temperatures so that over a long period he could determine what air conditions were best suited to hatching. The results of his experiments are to lie published in a detailed technical report, scheduled to be off the presses in about two months. Roughly, however, his experiments have shown that the ideal hatching conditions are: Temperature, 100 degrees; humidity. 00 per cent: and gaseous makeup of the surrounding air, one-half of one per rent oat bon dioxide anil 21 per rent oxygen. Barott experimented with temperatures ranging all the way from 90 degrees to well above 100 decrees; with humidity ranging from 8 to 87 per rent: and with gaseous makeups ranging from less tnan one-half of one per cent carbon dioxide and 15
per cent oxygen to 10 per cent carbon dioxide and 50 per cent uxvgen. He worked with 10O eggs for eaeSi of his experiments. Highest percentage of chicks he obtained from a single group was 95. but this was exceptional He considered 80 chicks out of 100 eggs good, and thought such a percentage would justify his ong years of work. Normal length of time to tiatoh 'hicks is 21 days. Barott found tnat raising the temperature would increase this incubating period by 24 to 36 hours, but that raising the temperature jus t 1 per cent would icsult in reducing the quality ot the chicks by 20 per rent. Therefore, he concluded. it would be far wiser not to attempt to speed up incubation. The "respiration calorimeters” with which Barott worked a"' specinllylesigned incubators in which all conditions can be regulated to the nth legree. Special electric grids allowed him to keep the temperature at exactly th point h wishd it. and unusual air intuks permitted him to make exact measurements of air conditions and keep them at whatever point he wished. Agriculture department officials said Barott’s experiments were “one of the most detailed pieces of work” ever conducted in the field of chick’
! hatching
They explained that few persons had gone into the question seriously enough to devote years to the problem. and that if Barott’s findings were put to actual use poultrymen undoubtedly would find they were producing a better quality chick ns well as getting a larger percentage
lof chicks.
Some new type incubators, they said, in which the eggs are kept in tiers of shelves, probably can tie adapted to making use of Barott’s findings without much difficulty because air conditions can be controlled within the tiers.: But small dealers, who have old-type equpnmnt and do no operate on an extensive scale.
probably will not be able to put the findings into practice, they iKilnied out. STONES REVEAL DINOSAI R CASK OF INDIGESTION BAKERSFIELD. Cal t'P' Sei. ntific evidence now exists that at least one dinosaur, about 10.000.000 years ago. developed a bad ease of indigestion by eating about three bushels of stones. That the dinosaur's digestive juiee-i. however, were not entirely ineffective against the unusual meal, is demonstrated by the fact that stones were at least converted into well polishe I marbles of pure quartz. Samples of he dinosaur's undigeste I meal have been received here by Paul VanderEighe, vice principal of the Kern County High Schorl, as an addition to the collection of his historical geological museum. They were sent by R A. Morris, Jr., educational adviser at the Bridgeland, Utah. CCC camp, near which they were found. Within the skeletal remains of a giant dinosaur found by the camp workers near Bridgeland, were nearly three bushels of the round quaitz stones. According to scientific knowledge, the stomach of thedinosaur resembled very much the gizzard of a chicken. Also like the chicken, he ate, instead of small pieces of gravel, fair sized stones, to help masticate and digest his food. YACHT MAN SAYS WHALE PHON ED ••.JONAH'' TO HIM SANTA CRUZ, Cal. (UP' A whale proved a real "Jonah" for Dave Wilson, piloting the club boat "Jack" in a recent race of the Santa Cruz Yacht Club. Wilson was obliged to content himself with second place because at the most critical point in the race a huge whale suddenly loomed up in the middle of his course and forced him to detour.
FOR RENT: Fixe room furnished house for one year. Address box 230 Banner Office. 29-2t FOR RENT: Semi-modem house, rent reasonable. Phone 646-Y. J. W. Herod.
FOR RENT: Five room house, furnished, 714 E. Washington street. Call 236 after 6:0(1 p. m. 28-5ts.
—Wanted —
WANTED: Vault and cesspool cleaning. Anything, anywhere. See or write J. C. Kumley, Greeneastle. R. 3. 28-5p
WANTED: Any kind of dead Rock. Call 278, Greeneastle or Ne-.v Maysville. Charges paid. John Wachtel Co. eod.
WANTED: Cook for restaurant; also waitress, fountain experience preferable. Address Box S. Banner, j 29-2p
FURNITURE repairing. chair caning, upholstering and remodeling. Work called for and delivered. Phone Bainbridge 11-61. Bell a- Proctor. 28-6t
LOST Female Boston terrier at Bainbridge Monday night. Black with white collar. Reward. Notify Dr. F C. Codings, Bainbridge. 30-2t
Coughlin Speech in Dakota Stirs Controversy
BOND SALE NOTICE CLOVERDALE SCHOOL TOWNSHIP OF PUTNAM < OU\I N Notice is hereby given that the 1 Trustee and Advisory Board ot Clo-I vordale School Township of Putnam ^ County, Indiana, will meet at tin of- | fice of the Township Trustee, at the : First National Bank at Cloverdale,: Indiana, on the 21st day of August. 1 1936. at the hour of 1:30 o'clock P. | M. (Central Standard Time), and at 1 said time and place receive bids on j and sell to the highest bidder therefor an issue of judgment funding | bonds of said School Towhship in tin amount of $20,000.00. Said bonds are dated August 1 1936. bear inter- i est at a rate not exceeding P, per annum (the exact rate to be determined by bidding )T which interest is | payable on July 1 1937 and semi an- ' nually thereafter. Said bonds v.Td be in the denomination of *1 00o and will mature as follows: $1,000 on July 1. 1937. and a like amount each six months thereafter. Bidders for thesi bonds will be tequired to name the rate of interest which the bonds aie to bear, not exceeding 4'r per annum. Such interest rate must be in multiples of of 1',. and not more than om interest rate shall be named by each bidder. Said bonds will be awarded to the highest responsible bidder xvho has submitted his bid in acordancc herewith. The highest bidder will be the one who offers the lowest net interest cost to the School Township, to be determined by computing the total interest on all of the bonds to their maturities and deducting therefrom the premium bid, if any. No bid for less than the par value of said bonds, including accrued inteiest to date of delivery, at the rate named in the bid, will be considi red. The light is reserved to reject ary and all bids. Said bonds arc being issued under the provisions "i Section 65-119 Burns Indiana Statutes 1933 lor the purpose of procuring funds with , which to pay and fund a certain out- j standing judgment against the School Township Said bon is are the direct obligations of the School | Township, payabh out of unlimited ad valorem taxes to be levied and collected on all taxable property within the School '' ownship. Tne approving opinion ol Matson. Ross, McCord & Clifford, bond counsel of Indianapolis. Indiana, will be on file on the day of sab and will be furnished to the suen sful biddei at the expense of the School Township. No conditional bids ill be considered. The bonds will be ready for delivery within twelve days after the uate of sale. Dated this 30th day of July. 1936 C M FURR, Trustee, Cloverdale School Township. 30-Aug. 6-2t
By RALPH HUSTON CHARTER I 117AY back yonder. In the dim. »» dead days—days before the gay Nineties, although (here is no telling now much betore—an epochal event occurred lu the city of Philadelphia. The particular household where this eveut took place paid but ordi nary heed to It. The neighbors gossiped do more than usual. There were jo blaring Deadlines In the papers, no marehlng hands. Yet it was epochal—to the modern generation. For back there In Philadelphia, a number of years ago. W. C. Fields was horn. He wasn't christened
Consequently, one chill October evening Bill cast the die and found that fate had ordered Him to leave home. He did. first popping bis Illustrious lorebear over the sconce with a bit ot scantling, as a sort of farewell gesture and evening-up process for nis most recent heating. Technically, Fields didn't run away from home. He merely failed to go home; and this, in the eyes ot the neighborhood ooys. made Him a superior being. He stood Above ana Beyond the Law. He was a thing apart, and. as such, xxas to be xvorKhiped and adored from afar. Somehow—at 11—he managed to exist He sold papers, shoveled snow and did odd jobs for money. For
n lle Rev Charles E. Coughlin was quoted as abm ? , <t ' lrinK an address near Hankinson, N. D., L on P : ,a * Lirmers should repudiate their debts, I Coup'i , ' e l '°htrover.sy was aroused. The Rev. that h * later tlenied the statement, explaining the f ". ' lai * sai1 * un ' es * something were done to aid His thp y would be “forced'' to repudiate lesittstic superior, Bishop Michael Gallagher
Rev. Coughlin and Congressman Lemkel of Detroit, in Rome to visit Pope Pius XI, declined to censor the radio priest for his outspoken attitude. The Rev Coughlin's appeal to the farmers came during a speech in support of Congressman William I^emke, Union candidate for president, with whom he is shown inset, as they spoke before a farm gathering ami "homecoming'’ for LemkJ who lives at Fargo, N D.
SOUTH SIDE TAVERN
GOOD EATS TABLES FOR LADIES
Ice Cold Bottle Beer * * ON TAP— SCHLITZ BEER (Exclusively) —DANCE FLOOR— • • H. L. FRAZIER & CO.
W. C Fields His iiumc, then, was Claude William Dukiutield The other name, now legal came later, after be bad survived the vicissitudes of several geiieiatioii! and proved himself the master juggler and master Humorist ot all time. Life, al tlrst, wasn't particularly kind lo young Ci-ade In tact, up until I'JJl hie tossed \V. (J. Fields around much in the fashion that tie was destined to ios: any number of unrelaied objects, it wasn't until two years ago that Life and W. C. Fields shook bands sue' made a deal. W. C. Fields promised to quit juggling and Life agreed to quit juggling W. C. Fields. Bill Lad a Bne mother. His father, be says, didn’t amount tc much It was bis sire, ib (act. who started Bill od tbe road to fame by incessantly blaming bim lor a number of things that were not'bis fault No doubt young Fields had his share o of lickings coming to bun. Possibly more. But be didn't believe be deserved tbe Inordinate amount tbut came bis way.
food, he filched what he could, or stole openly in saloons. A nickel would buy him a glass ol ginger ale, and whatever free lunch be could consume in a saloon. While most patrons xvere content lo stop xvitli a bite or two. Fields stocked his paunch and his pockets with provender for a week. He slept wherever he could—In livery stables, barns, ditches, caves or cellars. He scorned such assistance as was offered him by admiring youngsters, it was bis constant privation, he says, that gave Dim Hie love be has today for beds, la his home he has a huge four-poster, brilliant with the latest In sheets, blankets and quilts. No matter what the Fields’ finances may be today, a suitable, comfortable and elegant bed is the first requisite. Mark Twain would have liked to
have known Fields. The comedian did. in a big city, the things Hntl Twain dreamed for Tun: Sawyer and Muck Finn lluxx ih got away with it, tie doesn l Know today. But he did. There were no iruant oltl eels in those days. St nool was not compulsory He merely did what lie pleased when he pleased and there was uone to say him nay Possibly Bill bad some twinges of conscience. Probably he thought he should go home—at least tor bis mothers sake. But the certain knowledge that be would nave lo pay and pay for that farewell ges lure—that landed with such a delightful crunch on the bald pate ot his father deterred him He decided to work out his own salvation. A chance visit to a vaudeville performance gave America its greatest comedian. Up to the time ne managed to get this partieuiui ticket to a variety show Fields hud no future In mind. His sole idea was to avoid work—a feat that he Hud in.iii.iged with incredible dexterity. But al this performance he suw the Burns Brothers. Hod i"si them, wh never they may oe Without them there would he no W C Fields The Burns Brothers were jugglers ot average skill and nimuleiiess. High in the gallery. tnnUed by me seldom-seen sight, young Fields was overxvheltned wnh their ability After watching with pop-eyed amazement tie determined upon ms fuiure. He would. He decided, ue come a Juggler. Fortunately lor Anietna. and lor the world. Fields is blessed with a remarkable singleness o: purpose Once he gets an idea m ms head. It is almost impossible lo talk uuu out ot it. He la perfectly willing to take a chance on the consequences providing it is his ow n idea In later years be abandonee this nurd heudednest and It almost cost utiu his career. But Fields, even at 12. was deteiunueu. He was going to ue a juggler it it killed bin. And it almost did. He practiced for hour daily For implements ne useu tennis mills snatched as they were still iiouuemg; billiard bulls filched from a pool ball; utensils picked .out »l scrap neaps, and anyttnng else be could lay bis bands on. Mozart, Krelsler, Paderewski, Liszt and a dozen famous artists worked no Harder than did Fields. He imitated every trick tbe Burn* Brothers bad done—as tar as nis Hunted parapnernulia would permit—and Invented new ones. No matter bow proficient be became, be wasn t satisfied It was this same perseverance, in later years, that enabled him to perfect tbe threa cigar-boxes trick that no Juggiir has yet been able to imitate. a »• ee»(«<tw«dy
o
