The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 January 1937 — Page 3
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA FRIDAY, .TANFARY 1, 1M7.
On This —
NEW YEAR'S DAY We wish to express our appreciation of the confidence placed in us since 1921.
RECTOR Funeral Home
•!• -l* •!• •!• *!* © ;ST JEFFERSON TWP. -i rs. Viola McCammaek 4 •> •?- -!- *1* ft*. md Mrs. Earl Allen and Helen Mae and Mr. and -yd Allen and Marie Pierce
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eee Allen on Christmas eve. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Taylor spent the weekend with relatives at Petersburg. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Scott of Indianapolis spent Christinas day with
’r'Jr :I iSj’£fi3J3jf?®31Si3ISJ5IS/SI3ISI3f3J5IBISMSEISIBrd!/2ISlHlfirti;.' jfflSOEiSJBOieUSEJSrS Best Wishes
for The New Year MOORE ELECTRIC
Hello 1937!
Wo wish nil mir friends nnd enslomers a HAPPY AND j PROSPEROUS ' NEW YEAR ® f Lincoln Restaurant Glen Deem, Prop.
the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Watts. Oliver Stringer and daughter Gertie spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest McCammaek. Mrs. Catherine Coffee spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. Artie S miser. Mr. and Mrs. Abb Allee entertained their children Christmas day. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest McCammaek, and Thomas and Agnes Pierce spent Christmas with Mr .and Mrs. Charles Neier. William Coffee and Mrs. Major Coffee and daughter of Indianapolis spent ihe weekend with relatives near Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Cloyd Allen and Marie Pierce spent Christmas with Mrs. Allen's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Dorsett.
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Get ready for winter. We repair and rebuild automobile radiators. Scott’s Franklin Street Garage. 24-tf
FOR SALE: Coal. Call 258 Anderson & Crawley. 107 East Franklin Street. 29-4t
FOR SALE: Hot water heaters, defrosters, and batteries. Weber’s Garage. 29-4p
New 13-plate battery, $3.95 ex-
Dobbs Tire & Battery Ser-
M-W -F-tf
change.
^ vice.
1 FOR SALE OR cars arc in good
TRADE: These condition; 1931
Buick sedan; 1930 Marquette coupe, ' 1929 Chevrolet coupe, 1929 Ford sedan, 1929 Chevrolet truck only $65.00. Weber's Garage. 29-l-2p
I FOR SALE: Good used cars. Don’t buy any used car until you have in|vestigated the written warranty given by the L. & H. Chevrolet Sales. Inc., of Greencastle, with each better car sold. The warranty really protects the buyer. 13tf
THANKS to my many friends and customers for their loyal support given me in 1936. They made it the best year I have had in the past 15 years. Thanks to my many old customers and to the thousand new ones I am going to get in 1937. Eventually you will come to Campbells to get bargains, so why not now? Wishing you the finest 1937 spiritually and financially possible. Walter S. Campbell. Let’s go 1937.
FOR SALE — Like new, 520-egg Sears incubator. ReelsvlHe R. 2. Box 125. l-4-2p
FOR SALE: Late 1933 Dodge deluxe coupe, nimble seat. In good shape. Bach’s Motor Service. 18 South Jackson. Phone 14. l-2p
—Fop Rent-
FOR RENT: Very reasonable, nice country home on paved road. Close in. Ferd Lucas. 30-3t
i
F
It is our privilege to extend a NEW YEAR'S GREETING It is our sincere hope and aim to make your business relations ith us more pleasant. To this end we will strive in 1937. Mullins Drug Store WEST SIDE 8QTTARE
FOR RENT—Five room semi-mod-ern house with garage. Reasonable rent. 801 Lincoln aven je. 31-tf
FOR RENT Modern unfurnished newly decorated apartment at 102 East Seminary street. 30-3t.
-Wanted —
WANTED: Any kind of dead stock. Call 278, Greencastle or New Maysville. Charges paid. John Wachtel Co. eod.
—Lost—
LOST: Small red coin purse containing money. Reward. Phone 182. 31-2p
—M iseella neon«-
Custom weighing, 10c. 15 ton scales 107 East Franklin Street. Anderson & Crawley. 29-4t
For delivery Off car. Special priced amber jacket coal. Greencastle Cash Coal Company. Phone 161-Y m 330. 31-2t
NOTICE: Changed, city rollector. Phone 595.
garbage 41-4t
Happy New Year
We take this opportunity to thank all our friends for their patronage during the past year, and to state that we will try to give even better service throughout 1937. /
If you need anything in the building line just call 403.
Allan Lumber Co.
iJn
“A HOME OWNED A NT) OPERATED INSTITITIOV"
I Miss Elizabeth Lockridge’s midwinter semester in piano will open Monday, January 4th. Those interested in studying call at the Studio 202 .West Walnut street or Phone 416-Y. 31-3ts. Murder without a clue. Real police work of London’s Scotland Yard men, who solved a blind murder puzzle like a detective mystery novel. See the AMERICAN WEEKLY, the magazine distributed with NEXT SUNDAY’S CHICAGO HERALD AND EXAMINER.
We wish all our friends a Happy and Prosperous 1937
The Moderne “BILL” CRAWLEY North Side Square
Wanted for Cash: Business room on south side Washington street, being under lease makes no difference. See Ferd Lucas. l-2t
BATTERY Service. Rental and recharge. Delco batteries. Call 14. Bach's Motor Service. 18 South Jackson. l-2p
Williams Radio Service: Guananteed work. Tubes tested free. 138 West Berry Street. Phone 753-K. l-3t
makes ms first appearance in a 1 nillength motion picture in “Arizona ; Mahoney,” coming to the Granada tonight and Saturday. The story was adapted from Zane Grey’s “Stairs of Sand,” and tells of a stranded oamiI val operator, played by Cook, who i works out a love triangle made up of I Robert Cummings, June Martel and Larry Crabbe. It is worked out mainly by an elephane and a 22-inch cannon of the type used in circuses to shoot “human bullets” into the ai.*.
Winter Returns To Middle West
BREAK IN UNUSUAL WEATHER IS EXPECTED TO HALT WAVE OF SICKNESS CHICAGO, Jan. 1—A wide variety of weather mottled the nation today —rounding out in fitting fashion a year of meteorological extremes. Snow and sub-zero cold beset some of the western states. Temperatures ranged up into the fifties in the east. Chilly weather followed heavy rain on the Pacific coast. Readings of 12 below were reported at Havre, Mont., and Lander, Wyo., four below at Sheridan. Wyo., three below at Miles City, Mont. Side roads were blocked and highway traffic impeded by wind-whip-ped snow in parts of Minnesota. Bus service between Fairmont and St. Paul was temporarily abandoned. Snow measuring up to two feet in depth fell in northern Arizona, Utah ami southern Idaho. A gale delayed navigation on Lake
Michigan.
The return of wintry weather in the midwest ended 17 days of unseasonable wannth and presaged a break in the spread of illness. Twenty-six deaths were attributed to pneumonia and five to influenza here in a 24-hour period. Portland. Ore., reported the coldest day of the season with the thermometer registering 30. It was 15 at Spokane, Wash. Scattered showers doused northern California but skies cleared at Los Angeles after 1.90 inches of rain fell in 24 hours. Early in 1936, the coldest 35-day period on record spread death and suffering through the midwest. Subsequently, tornadoes swept the south and floods coursed from the Atlantic seaboard to the Mississippi river. A disastrous drought leveled crops in the major agricultural states during a summer of intense heat. YEAR JUST CLOSED MARKED BY EXTREMES IN WEATHER With temperatures that soared from a high of 111 degrees to a low of 22 degrees below zero, with a long summer drought and a windstorm that wrought damage to the city, 1936 was a year of unusual weather. The temperature of 111 degrees, recorded on July 14, was the highest ever recorded here. There were twelve consecutive days in August when the mercury mounted to 100 or above every day. This was from the 5th to the 16th, inclusive. The mercury again went above 100 degrees on July 26 nnd 27 and on five days in August. It mounted to 100 and went on to 103 degrees on June 29, which day started the prolonged “hot period.” The drought which accompanied the hot weather started in May, dragged through June and ended late in July when close to four inches of rain fell within twenty-four hours. December. 1936, was quite a contrast to that of December a year ago when the mean temperature for the month was only 27 degrees and when the mercury went to a low of 6 degrees below zero on Dec. 27.
Previews and Reviews AT LOCAL THEATERS
Y oncost le
Produced entirely in Technicolor, “Ramona” comes to the Voncastle theater tonight and Saturday. Loretta Young has the title role and Don Ameche has the principal supporting part. Included in the cast are Kent Taylor. Pauline Frederick. Jane Darwell and Katherine DeMille. “Ramona” is a love story of early California and the picture is filled with high romance, fiestas, fandangos. songs, roses, secret trysts, misison bells, stolen kisses, tears, love and laughter. The main location for the filming of the production was in the San Jacinto mountains, where the natural beauty of the region made a perfect setting.
Chateau
"The Three Mesquiteers.” coming to the Chateau tonight and Saturday, is the first of eight of a series of pictures dealing with the same characters. The story embraces the activities of three hard-riding, pistoltoting "soldiers of fortune,” wIkj spend carefree days riding the mesquite ranges of the Great Plains seeking whom they may aid, looking for trouble as long as they find adventure. The three “mesquiteers’* are Robert Livingstone, Ray “Crash” Corrington, and Syd Saylor.
Granada
Joe Cook, for many years one of America’s outstanding comedians,
COMMISSIONERS’ CLAIMS A list of claims filed in the County Auditor's office for allowance by the Board of Commissioners of the County of Putnam, at the January Term,
1937:
The Daily Banner, $23.25; Merchant Calculating Machine Co. $5.21; The Daily Danner. $4.00: The Daily Banner, $18.25; John T. Sutherlin, $43.32; Woodstock Typewriter Sales Co., $25.00; Chas. H. Rector. $58 10; The Daily Banner, $9.00: Woodstock Typewriter Rebuilder Sales Co. $2.50; Indiana Associated Telephone Co., ! $33.95; Olive Johnston, $4.24; Lee I School Supply Co., $43.27; E. A Browning Hdw. Co.. 95; G. B. Shannon. $1 00: Drs. W. M. A C. B. O’Brien. $20.00; W. A. Beemer, $6 00; John T. Sutherlin, $21.20; Greencastle Water Co.. $44.05: Shelby Detro, $30.00; Alice Detro, $20.00: Rebecca White. $30.00; Alice Davis. $30.00; S. J. Dow, $2.65: Tom Raines, $5.00; Iven Clark, $2.50; Mooresville Public Service Co., $11.20: Russell Scohee, $17.85; C. A. Kelley. $46.28; Purity Bakeries. $27.60; Indiana State Prison. $29.67; Merit Shoe Co., $8.39; Frank Riley. $8.65; R. P. Mullins, $10.41; Owl Drug Co. $16 56, Lee School Supply Co., $37 18; Fred Hanks, $129.08; Hillis Feed Store, $25.00; Ott Lydick, $44 00; E. A Browning Hdw. Co., $22.75; Scohee Bros., $26.05; Janies A. Burk. $67.50; Mrs. Hazel Goodwin. $6.95; E. A. Browning Hdw. Co., $1.50; The Daily Banner, $89.36; Times-News, $179.57; Russellville News. $7.72; Joe M. Eckles, $23.75; Roachdale Bank & Trust Co., $410.00; Ferd Lucas. $12.50; John O. Rightsell. $122.50; Simpson Stoner. Inc., $52.50; Centra! Insurance Co.. $50.00; D. A. Grimes. $3.75; Frank Reed, $50.00; Northern Indiana Power Co., $77.94; Fred Lancaster. $86.12; Fred Lancaster, $20.36; The Daily Banner, $15.00; Sam Hanna Book Store. $61.70. Gasoline Claims Lester Wilson. $11.00; W. V. Barker, $2.60; Alvora Weller. $4.00; D. V. Etcheson, $1.75: Flem Templeman $1.60; Sam Roe. $26.25; Homer Martin, $12.75; Wm. Hubble, $6.00; George Stewart, $13.20: Earnest Thompson. $47.75; Art Bell. $1.75; Mark Priest, $2.00; Herb Jeffries, $1.00; C. Henry. $3.60; Henry Phillips, $36.40; Vem Runnells, $225; Jake Shaw. $2 25; Harry Beck, $10.25; Ezra Arnold, $2.25; Alva Jenkins. $6.25; Hunter Bios., $19.40; Emra Wright, $8.80; Clarence Harvey, $2.25; Fred Sanford. $2.25; Roscoe Jenkins, $1.25; Alva M. Gowen, $27.25; Clint Judy, $13.00; Cully Price, $10.75; Kenneth Modlin $12.25; Harley Pitchford, $18.60: Edwin Proctor. SI 1.00; F. T. Brown. $42.20; ,T. E. Proctor. $2.25; D. McCoy, $2.80; Lee Myers, $36.25; Paul McCormick, $21.60; Alva Myers $36.25; Mrs. Katie Johnson, $12 00: Elmer Clodfelter, $18.00; Willard Sutherlin. $4.50; Donald Hays, $1.00; Charles Marsteller, $1.50; Dennis Clodfelter, $10.00; Lee Bryan, $4.50; Walter Wright, $6.00: Norris Clark, $6.00; Woodrow Tharp, $6.00; Hersctael Smith, $4.00; Hunter Bros.. $22.40; Kenneth Knauer. $47.50; Perl Ward, $20.00; John Nelson. $20.80; Fred Knauer, $46.00; Wayne Roach $73.60; Cloyd Hall, $21.60: Frank Nelson, $21.60; David Nelson, $19.60; John Skelton, $12.60; John Rominger, $30.80; Paul Thomas, $7.20; Claude Cantonwine, $13.20: Emory Brattain. $2.00; Herschel Frost, $10.00; Lee Coltharp, $11.00: Rex Hathaway, $18.00; G. Brown. $19.40: Ben Henry $1.60; Heni-y Marshall, $10.60; Wm. Gowens, $1.20; Kimel Wilson, $38.00; Willis Neese, $21.25; James Nicely,
$ » 25
Charles Smiley. $1.25; W. E. Gowen. $43.40: Edmond Marshall. $2160; Paul Thomas, $18.40; Fted Johns, $18.00; George Skelton. $18; Robert Johns, $13.50; Ida- Evans, $10.80; Earl Ellis. $36.00: Ralph Call. $9.60; Frank I^ancaster, $6.75; Earl Rowings. $21.60; Ernest Heber $3.60; Harold Shaner. $13.50; Janies Hood. $12.40; Mack Rollings. $4.00; Bnino Mann. $3.00; Herman Flint, $6.24; Henry Marshall, $19.80; Robert Lewis. $11.70; Dove Cox. $3.90; Ira Hutcheson. $20.75; John Harvey $14.40; Roy Clodfelter. $15.20; Wm Newgent. $22.85; Morris Irwin $7.20; Claude Crodian, $7.20; Herman Neal, $4.50; Ralph Clodfelter. $3120, Sherrill Ball. $7.20; Paul Albin. $7; Clarence Ball, $5.00; J. T. Bettis, $2.25; Andrew Sweeney, $12.80; Robert Sweeney, $9.75; Jno. M. Sigler, $31.25; Thos. Roach, $3.50; Marion OHair, $36.25; Clem Larue. $3.00; Kate Johnson, $29.30; Glen Flint, $7.50; Sam Shonkwiler, $3.60; Chas. Davis. $18.00: Will Mitchell. $10 00: Dwight O’Hair. $6.75; Robert Morphew, $7.00; Bryan Brackney, $1 00; L. E. Herbert. $29.70; Ceibert Bond, $2 25; Wavne McCullough, $32.40; Clifford Sadler. $28 80; Forest Hutcheson, $14.40; Charlie Little, $1.25; Verner Houck, $18.00; James Burnett. $2 10; Roy Hutcheson, $5.85; George Hurst. $25.10; Chas. O’Conner, $2.70; G. E. McCammaek, $2.25; John Goss, $2.70; Clarence Taylor, $2.25; Roy Herbert, $7.20; A. Barnes, $4.50; E. E. Hurst, $14.40; L. Wildman. $15.30; Wilson T. Blue, $20.75; Gilbert McCammaek, $15.05; J. R. Goss. $20.10; George McCammack, $13.40: Charles O’Conner, $2.40; Ramond McCammaek, $3.50; Virgil Blue, $3.25; Arthur Bines,
$2.40.
Clarence McCammaek. $1.75: Clarence McCammaek. $3.25; Floyd Maxwell. $5.75; Walter Hanes. $8.00; Tol Walters, $14.75; Virgil Walters. $20; Charles Duncan. $20.75; Floris Lewis $7.00; Nota Keller. $9.00; John Gus, $7.20; Gilbert McCammaek, $6 00; Clarence Taylor, $6.00; Geo. McCammack, $7 20; Ertis McCullough, $40.05; Edwin Trester, $153.80; B. F. Winninger, .75; Jesse Fhsher, .75; Homer Bond .75; James Fielding .75; Wm. Sandara, .75; Al Anton, $14.65;
Harvey Neese. $6 00; Hubert Jeffries $6.00; Wm. Johnson, $3.25; Verlor Caasady, $6.00; Herschel McCullough $6.00; Elmer Odinius. $6.00: John Smith, $6.00; Oral McCullough, $4; O. G. Matkins. $6.00; J. C. Hinote, $33.90; Harley Neese. $9.60; Lem Skelton. $5.95; Lester Hapenny, $2.80; Rader Hathaway. $13.00: J. D. Rader, $3.60; William Emory. $4.25, Irvin Hapenny, $2.00: John Hinote, $7.00; Glen Daggy, $3.50; Paul Allen, $3.50: Noah Roberts, $9.90; Sam Duzan. $2.00: E. J. O’Conner, $20.00; Jesse Eggers, $2.00: Earl Haltom. $16.00: Walter O’Conner. $2.25; Clyde Hammick, $4.50; Eugene Cooper, $22.50; Ralph Jones. $10.40; Louis Ridgeway. $4.80; Jess MeKamey, $6 00: William Glover. $4.50: Alva Jones. $4.50; Thomas F. Williams. $6.40; Roy Stockwell, $8.50; Bridges. $8.75; J. W. Hendrix, $9.37; Fant Judy. $45.50: Clinton Judy. $6.25: Bill Bain. $4.25; Chas. W. Silvey, $2000; Sam Dove, $18.75: Ben Wood, $20.00; Lear Lane. $7.00; l>*e Myers, $1.80; Arthur Eggers, $25.50: Don Dehart, $4 00; Edward Merritt. $8.00; Sam Woods, $10.00; Raymond Ader, $10.50: Chas. Osborn $8.00; Julian McVay, $4.00; Earl Sutherlin, $5 00; Oscar Evans. $40 Claude M. King, $30.25; Fred Ihadd, $19.50; Rav Grimes, $26 50: A. H. Parrish. $25.25; Fred Hamplon, $9.00; James Woods. $10.00: lames Bennett. $13.00: Otho Chadd, $21.25; James White, $3.75; Jessie Colvert. $6 00; Dewards York, $1.3.50; Tata.es McDonald, $9.75; Eugene Watts. $3.60; Tildon MrNeff. $200; Mrs. Luther Ford. .75; John Patterson, $3.00; Sylvester Branham, $3.00; Elvin Harlan, $49.60: Henry Perkins, $57.60; Chester Pickett. $200 99: Lee Whitaker. $70.20; Robert Thomas. $67.50; Stanley Kessler, $55.25; Russell Plummet. $64.80; A. P. Robinson. $60.90; Maurice Steirwalt, $67.50; Will Glidewel). $28.20. High Point Oil Company, $353.94; Weesner Implement Co.. $1,000; Standard Accident Co.. $315.46; The Daily Banner. $11.09: Furniture Exchange, $8; Gibson Co., $19.89; Willis Neese, $1.00; J. D. Adams Co., $4.80; Chas. W. Pfieffenberger, .75; Dobbs Tire and Battery Co., $202.55; Thomas Stanger. $47.25; Frank Riley $12.48; Ettis Arnold. $15.00: W. A. Corns. $6.60; Carey Dillinger $271.32; Janies Skimmerhorn. $57.75; W. P. Rigdon, $256.00; Otho Ellis. $15.75; T. R. Woodbum Ptg. Co., $54.40; Chas. Steegmiller. $2.25; E. L. Walker, $56 70: Stringer & McCammaek, $503.04: City Water Works. $1.25: F. A Williams. $1.00; The Daily Banner, $51.00; Midwest Stone Co., $193.27; Wilbur W. Welch. $11.25; Indiana Associated Telephone Co.. $9.55; Indiana State Farm, $110.61; Ohio 4 Indiana Stone Co., $49.37; Harry W. Lane. $17.00; King-Morri-son-Foster Co., $950.00; L. 4 H. Chevrolet Co., $005 00; Scohee Bros. $102.34.
M. |tl% cei Vuf'
ren that nealed up to twelve
XOTICK TO llimiKItS roil COI XTV KOtf) ftt KOH l»l TWM
roi \T\, l\Dl.% N % Not ir e Is hereh
hiits will he
oVlrx'k, noon, on Tuesday, the f*th day
UU17, :it the office of the
liter of put
dlanu. In the City of (IreemuM
Xh«* furnishing: of
of Juimary.
county auditor of Putnam Cou
the City of C.i shtng of suppl
ecmlpro« n t t in ' i. • • - m ’ v Id ay stem of *aid Putnam cmmty,
mty, Instle, for
ics, materials
the count v highway hum County, for the
year.
The kind and character of ill said highvciii supplies. materials and equipment, and full itemized specification*, naming and d* iKnniing the ftame, ar* fully named and described in the requisition made and filed in the said auditor's office, by tlm County Highway Supervisor of said county, imi which said requisition is now for the inspection of bidders nnd
_ Bor imd which said requisition is now open
pei -
sons desiring to make nnd submit bids furnish and supply such supplies.
- In
includes the following named
.«»n
material and equipment, ami in part tides the following named materia). articles and supplies .to-wit: 100.000 Tons of crushed stone at Quarry, dumped in county trucks. 00,000 Yards of gravel, in all parts
o' Putnam County.
G.000 Yards of crushed stone, in Monroe, Clinton, and Cranklin town-
ship*. ti.OOC
2.000 Pounds of dynamite.
L\:>00 Pounds of nails, sizes
jQO Gallons of bridge
ti.000 Yards of crush* «I stone, in Cloverdale, Jefferson, and Warren town-
ships.
20.000 Feet cresote bridge flooring. 2a0 Gallons anti-freeae, for radia-
tors.
)0 Pounds of dynamite.
s 6 to 10.
paint.
TNirts for Chevrolet, Ford and International truck*. 2.".0 Feet of metfll roofing. 5.000 Cedar Shingles. 800 Barrels of cement and lime. 1.200 Gallons motor oil. all grades, 1.000 Pounds of gun grease. 1.000 POurtds of transmission grearp. 1.000 Pounds of transmission oil, ] 1.000 pounds of belts, all sizes. 2.000 Pounds o*f iron rods, 1-2 Inc^i to 7-8 inch. 25.000 Pounds of roun steel. 2-8 Inch to 1-4 inch. 20.000 Pounds of I Beams, 0 inch to 111 Inch. 75.000 Feet whit* oak bridge flooring, not less than t> Inches wide, 16 feet long and 2 1-2 Inches thick. 100 Grader blades amt drug blades. ♦ Metal arch culverts, contractor to supply a competent workman to In-
“•all.
10.000 Feet metal sewer pipe, to he
12 to 4K inches.
60.0
«v, v 00 Gallons gasoline, to he deliver! to trucks, tractors a ini County
Ij*o, axes, picks and handles, niat-
*l« i
le shovels, squa
ivels, and
scythe blades ami handles, tine
locks and handles, short hand!
Il<
handles, sand scoops,
miles, tine forks.
les. short ha mile shov-
long handle shovels, square point
and handles, sand
brooms, lanterns, black wire, files, cold chisels, plow steel log chains,
tan*
4 C
000
itard cross cut sows.
Feel
ich.
Bt pine lumber, 1 it
4 inch to 12 inches wide.
vitrified sewer pipe, 4
1 Inch to 2
t \
Inch to 24 inch.
10.000 Feet pine lumbei
Inch thick. 4 ir
60.000 Feet native lumber of all
dimension*.
6 Dozen wheelbarrows, to he a good
grade of steel.
Bidders, that you may make no mistake. Inspect said requisition to make sure of your information on which to
submit your bid*.
All bids must be submitted on blanks furnished by t lie county auditor, and be accompanied by a bond or certified check, and be for a sum of ten per cent of the total hid submitted, check to be made payable to county
of Putnam County. Indiana,
bond to be made to the Hoard of Com-
missioners of the Gnu
State of Tndiar
treasurer »d to be
of
ate of Indiana.
Bidder must file with his bid a non-
Dunty of Putnam,
Bidder must tile ceasful bidders wi collusion affidavit
proi .
i affidavit as required by law, or his bid will not he considered. The checks and bonds of the unsuc-
le c
turned to the respective bidders. All the quantities designated uned In thin notice and the roqt: Mon of said Highway Supervisor. maximum wmounts. Putnam
and lisi-
fo Cc
a pa
th
County reserves the right to purchase rt or all of said items named, and
the contractor must so understand, and supply any part or all of said sunplies, material and articles named when wanted and ordered by the high-
wav supervisor.
The successful bidder will be required to enter into a written contract to oarry out his contract as soon a* bid is awarded him
ABIGAIL GOOFFR. Gonnty \udltor. John H. James,
County Atty. 25-l-2t
