The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 June 1937 — Page 3
the DAILY BANNEB, GREENCASTT.E, INDIANA, SATEKDAV .7f'NE 12, l*». r 5r.
-For
PUBLIC SALE I will w*ll lit puhlli- auction at my farm, one mile south of Morton, In«L. ' 10 inllew northwest of (ireenrastle, 10 I miles isist of Kochvillc just south of
State Koad 96, on .
Tuesday, June 15, 1937 At 11:00 A. the following cattle: 20 HEAD JERSEY COWS, ranging from 2 to 8 years old, 15 with calves by side. Fart of these cows and calves will sell separate, as some of the calves are ready for market. Will
New 13 plate battery, guaranteed 6 month $3.1*0 exchange. Get our prices on Lee tires before you buy. Scott's Franklin Street Garage, phone 68. 22-tf ].-()R SALE: 10 fresh cows, 6 * r-v 1 : Jm ' y rz i '«=« &
cows. S. B. Love, Morton. 7-6t. dairy bred and are giving a heavy
— 1 flow of milk.
FOR SALE: Hurry, a bargain like | « SPRINGER COWS, S to 5 y.-ars
♦ his ilocs not last long. 1935 Ford <>1«14, 2 YK. OLD JERSEY SPRING-
ERS.
8 JERSEY YEARLINGS, bred.
2
li ton truck and stock rack. Bach’s (linage, So. Jackson. ll-2t.
" „ IT j T~ | 2 REGISTERED HEREFORD for SALE: Three ■emi-modem I COWS, due to calve hist of month, houses of five and six rooms at pick Weigh 1250-1804) pounds, up prices. J. T. Christie, Real Es- 2 SHORTHORN YEARLING tatc. at Rightsell Loan & Insurance j ““SSvSlfn 1 ® 40 SHORTHORN
Above animals all JERSEY BULLS,
all
Says Common Fly
IT 17 TVT 1 I ‘ Yir anu " House hnemy \So. I Mr * Ha r y
J | day of Mr.
EXTENSION ENTOMOLOGIST OF HURDLE OFFERS SUG-
GESTIONS
Agency. 22 S. Jackson Street. ll-2t. FOR SALE: Boston puppies, At Sttnl Rockefellers Nifty Son. Nina Los.son, 619 E. Seminary street. ll-3t. FOR SALE 1937 G. M. C. truck, i. ton, 120" wheel base pickup, demonstrator. 1,000 miles, $100 discount. Miller at L. & H. Phone 340.
ll-5t.
FOR SALE: Just received, one John Deere pick-up hay press, will take it out of windrows or out of stack; a 2 man hay baler. Walter S. Campbell. 7-9-12-3t
REGISTERED BULL, jearllng. abortion tested. 2 PUREBRED
ready for service.
The above bunch of cattle are
Indiana bred.
15 TO 20 HEAD STOCK CATTLE, Herefords and Shorthorns. About 200 chestnut fence posts, all split and seasoned. TERMS: CASH.
S. B. LOVE
Auctioneers: Charles Saylor, A. R. Ford, Ellsworth Stewart. George Scott, Clerk. Ladies of Morton M. E. Church will servo lunch.
FOR SALE: A one hundred sixty acre farm in Clinton Township at a bargain price. J. T. Christie, Real Estate at Rightsell Loan & Insurance Agency, 22 S. Jackson Street. ll-2t. FOR SALE: 150 bushels corn. C. E. Mitchell at Bainbridge. ll-2t.
FOR SALE: Six year old horse, snund, weight 1500 lbs., E. E. Coffman, Greencastle, R. 3. 12-lp FOR SALE: Rural New York potatoes and 25 shoats weight 90 lbs. Olen 0. Dudley, Fillmore. 12-3p FOR SALE: One Power 7 ft. mower for an F-20 tractor Farmall, Price $3500. Walter S. Campbell, Green-ca-stle. 9-12-2t
FOR SALE: One hay Ibader; one side delivery rake; one John Deere pickup hay press: a 2 man hay baler. Walter S. Campbell. 10-12-2t. FOR SALE: California Wonder pepper plants, 15c per dozen. Phone 105-Y, Mrs. T. C. Cox. 10-3t.
FOR SALE: Four sows with 29 pigs, Big type Poland male hog, Shorthorn cow and calf by side. Clarence Runyan, 1>.. piiles from Mt. Meiidian on Back-bone rodd. ll-2p.
—For Rpnt—
For rent for summer—Small furnislud apartment, suitable for one of two people, $15 a month. The Towers. Call 816-Y. 10-3p.
—Wanted
Vacancies Exist in U. S. Army. Apply 408 Federal Building, Indianapolis, Indiana. 10-3p.
WANTED —Iron, metal, books, rags, hides, paper, steam engines, tractors. Always pay highest cash price, honest weight. Call 604. Greencastle Scrap Paper Company, Corner Maple and Ohio street. Tues-Thura-Sat-tf
these prow less of the household have slain tens of thousands. Of all the vermin, the are the most filthy: of all spreaders of 'disease, they are
among the most deadly.
The above statementn were made recently by G. E. Lehker, extension entomologist of Purdue University Experiment Station, in connection with a discussion on the control of house flies. He said that the house fly is bom in filth nowhere else— and his life is in keeping with his birth. The manure pile, the garbage can, and the cuspidor are his haunts. It is from these that he comes to the kitchen, the dining room, and baby's nursery. He seeks out the sick room of the consumptive, the typhoid fever patient, and the child with infantile diarrhea or colic. Then he flies to your kitchen and desposits the deadly germs on the rim of the milk bottle. From this we readily see that the fly is not only an annoying pest. He is one of our most deadly enemies and we should not tolerate his presence ! n our homes. In recent years we have learned to control house flies by the elimination of their breeding places and by destroying the maggots before They have a chance to emerge as adult flies. This procedure combined with the proper use of Screens, traps, baits, and sprays has made it possible to eliminate, to a large extent,
the house fly menace.
Flies multiply with such rapidity that it is necessary to remove their breeding places at least once a week in order to prevent the maggots from completing their life cycles. This ability to increase so rapidly explains why only a few flies in the spring of the year can produce the astonishing numbers so often present by late summer. If manure, garbage, or any other decaying organic matter can not be removed as often as necessary. the next best thing is to dust it thoroughly with borax or cryolite and wash with water in order to kill the immature flies wlfich are, undoubtedly, prsent there. Flies are often attracted in large numbers from
NOTICE OF SETTLEVIENT OF the out buildings to the house by the No * I " , ’87 AT, ' J GUARDIAN presence of food materials. ThrowNotice is hereby given that the dishwater out of the back undersigned guardian has been auth-1 door will attract millions of flies to orized bv the Judge of the Circuit the house during the course of a Court of Putnam County. State °f| gumrn er. The same is true of open Indiana to settle the estate of Susan . E. Herod, late of Putnam County. swl " buckets, etc. Tight window and deceased without the issue thereon door screens, of course, will do much of letters of administration. I to keep the flies outside. Said estate is supposed to be sol-1 After the individual has
Asia by way of Alaska some thous-
ands of years ago.
“Search will be made for paleontological and archeological rernains such as fossilized skeletons nf humans and animals and made-made implements, which may throw some light upon the nature and culture of the first immigrants to this continent,” Father Murray said.
ON EMU BIT
RICHMOND, Ind , June 12.—(UP) —The skin and skull of a giant panda, rare, bear-like animal only in western China, was on exhibit when the annual Earlham college commencement week-end started today. The skin and skull were presented to the college by Arnold Vaught, graduate of the class of 1936 who has been a missionary in western China. He is now on furlough and is returning to the United States by way of England. Students of pathology and geology at Earlham have been preparing the skull and skin of the panda for dis-
play.
Earl Dillinger at Indianapolis Mon-
day.
Mr. and Mrs, Frank Lane, and Mr.
Lane were guests Sun
j day of Mr. and Mrs. Carey Dillinger. ! Mrs. Robert Dillinger and children ■ of Ben Davis were guests of Mrs i Carey Dillinger and children Tues-
I 'Jay.
———— j Mr. and Mrs. Robert Irwin and The common hcusefly has been | Gleiulon MrfI Carey D i llln ^ er an( recognizeti as one of the worst ene-1 Maxine were visitors in Terre Haute
mies that mankind has among the Saturday.
Ihing creatures. Although beats ofj Mrs. Mary Dillinger has gone tr the jugle have slam their thousands,! Kanafl to v ; 8it her si8ter for a fesx
weeks.
Carey Dillinger and family called Tuesday evening. Mr. Albert Frost who drives thi Madison Township school bus. Accompanied by Mrs. Frost and children, took the school children to R* verslde park at Indianapolis Sun.lay Mr. and Mrs Harry Marshall wer Sunday guests of Mr. and M^s Frank Busby near Brazil. Mrs. Lester Wells is ill with t^n ■sillitis at Dj home of Mr. an 1 Mr.* U. W. Johnston Mr. and Mrs. John Lavtnan visltc Mr. James Layman at Indianapolir Inst week who has been ill for th past four months and is at ill no* much changed. Mr. and Mrs. George Marshall o West-Ville visited Mr. and Mrs Charles Marshall at Greencastle Sat urdnv and returned home Mondav. Mr. and Mrs R. \V. Johnston v'si ted Mr. and Mrs. John Johnston Sunday afternoon
DRIVEWAYS FROM STATE HIGHWAYS TO BE INSPECTED Construction of driveways on state
highway right-of-way for filling sta-; tions and other restablishments is to he approved by the Bureau of Traffic whenever there is a possibility that the drive will he a safety hazard. I Earl Crawford, chairman of the State Highway Commission, rejiorted 11-
day.
Applications for such driveway construction will ho referred to the Bureau of Traffic for investigation and approval by the highway engineers and superintendents, as a means of eliminating a possible hazard to motoring safety. Among the | requirements to be met before ap- I proval will be given applications for 1 permission to construct driveways on state highway right-of-wav, a-e: Drainage structures and the drive- | way itself are the only things to be 1 permitted to occupy the right-of-way. Gasoline pumps must be at least ten feet hack of the right-of-way line and the applicant must secure a permit for their erection from the state fire marshal before filing his applica-1
tion.
Establishments so designed that
vehicles will be permitted to park so as to obscure proper sight distance U an intersection or on the inside of \ curve, are objectionable and such
parking will he discouraged.
No establishment, especially filling J stations, should be constructed at i dangerous locations where fast-mov-J ing vehicles may leave the road and I collide with buildings, pumps, etc. j
Suitable places for the location of
stop and directional signs should be reserved at Intersections when driveways are being located. The state law requires that stop signs he plac-
Administration Building of the University of Notre Dame where Mr. Dennis F. Kelly, Chicago merchant philanthropist, will address the 479 graduates at the 93rd Commencement exercises on Sunday, June 6. Most Rev. Karl Alter, bishop (J Toledo, will deliver the Baccalaureate.
the
vent.
Ruth McLean, Guardian. Charles McGaughey. Attorney, Homer C. Morrison, Clerk. Putnam Circuit Court. (seal) 12-3t.
WANTED: Woman for general housework and care of children. Mrs. George Harvey, Plainfield, R. 1. Phone 234-3. 10-3p.
tV ANTED: Vault and cesspool cleaning. Free estimate on cost. J. C. Rumley, R. 3, Airport Road. 10-3p Salesman Wanted: Make your livestock experience earn good money. No investment. Protected territory. Famous brand of livestock remedies fells everywhere. NI>SRCo., 7941 So. Halsted. Chicago. ll-2p. PLANS FAMILY NIGHT The Fillmore Rebecca lodge will. entertain with a "family and guest | night” program Tuesday evening’, , June 15. All members have been. fc^ked to bring their families and : Kuests. A pitch-in supper will be served. SEARCH IN ALASKA SOUTH BEND, Ind., June 12.— (UP)—Rev. Raymond W. Murray, professor of anthropology at Notre Lome university, is on his way to Alaska with a scientific expedition to search for evidence of the first inhabitants of the North American eontinent. The expedition, sponsored by the Aornen Museum of Natural History of the University of Alaska, will excavate near Fairbanks in the Mastodon creek district. Skeletons of pre-historic mammoths, mastodons and other animals already have been found and the expedition is holpeful of discovering ■“ome viderce of the habitation of
TRUNKS
I me.
If you have a trunk to be sent to any point, north, south, east or west, you can do no better than to call United Merchants Truck We will call for It, take It from any floor and ship It properly. Phone 144
NOTICE
man there, if so, it woidd tend to
verify the thedry iTlftf The first occu- . Pants of North America came from Telephone Corporation
You Can Save Money by paying your Telephone account on or before the 15th of each month So as to avoid a Collection Charge.
done
everything possible to rid the premises of flies some of the pests may be present because they readily fly from place to place. For this reason a neighborhood fly elimination campaign is exceedingly desirable. Mr. Lehker said further that an effective poison bait to kill flies in an about the premises can be made at home. A teaspoonful of formaldehyde in a cup of sweetened milk and water will readily attract and kill the flies. The bait should be placed in shallow containers about the house, or where-ever the flies are numerous. It is not poisonous to humans, and can safely be used in the presence of children or other irresponsible persons. Most of the fly sprays, baits, and tangle-foot materials manufactured and sold by reliable companies will also give good results when used according to directions. The use of screen fly traps baited with banana skins or other attractive baits provide additional {protection when placed about dwellings or near out-houses. For details concerning the construction of a fly trap, cr the use of other controls, write to the Purdue University Department of Agricultural Extension, and ask for stencil leaflet No. 1.
Greencastle Exchange
Indiana Associated
0 4* + + + "F + + + + + ^ •!• BRUN ER8TOWN + ■9 Mrs. Lovle Johnston (5j + -> + + + + 4* + , H , + +4S| Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Ellis left Wednesday to visit Mrs. Ellis parents Mr. and Mrs. Holderman near Warsaw, Indiana from there they will go to Canada where Mr. Ellis will be under the doctor’s care taking j treatments. Mrs. Lee Cox is slowly impreving. Mr. and Mrs. George Spencer visited Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Berkley and daughter Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Irwin, Mr. and Mrs. Hurndon Irwin, and Mrs. George Spencer called on Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Irwin and children Sunday afternoon. Marjorie Irwin is the guests of her grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Robert Irwin this week. Mr. and Mrs. Carey Dillinger and children attended the funeral of Mr.
SYNOPSIS
Carol Iloivard felt that nothin <j would ever free her from her life of genteel drudgery for the romance she dreamed about. Then one morning a letter arrived telling her that she had won an unbelievable fortune in the lottery. With her semi-in-X'alid aunt gone to Brighton, Carol and her friend Kate plan their new life, and await the arrival of Carol's fiance, Ronnie, from his five-year sojourn in the Sudan The apartment (.* to let, and a stranger has arrived to
inquire about renting i(.
But I’m glad I found out about it
in time.”
Ronnie became cold and grave. “If you foil that way about it,” be said slowly, “I’m glad too." And donning his hat. be walked rapidly from the apartment. Carol sat stunned for an instant, then raced after him. As she opened the door. Lovell confronted her again. "Shall I call him back'.”' he
inquired blandly.
“No, it's nothing important." she raid with sudden decision. “Won't
you come in?”
' It seemed now that Lovell was very much taken with the flat. But when Carol told him that she would only be gone for six weeks, he demurred. "It’s hardly worth my trouble," he said. "But I'll think it
over and telephone you.”
He stepped across the threshold. ^ "The number is Baywater 6003,” hat in hand, and Carol noticed that Carol said. ,, , , , he was as pleasant and gentle as He whipped a small book from he sounded. A high, cultured fore- his pocket and extracted a pencil head with carefully brushed wavy from the back of its binding. J h° hair and deep-set, thoughtful eyes pan*? * 3 Howard, he inquired, lookwere the first things that met her * n K into her eyes, glance. Then she noticed that hia j Carol felt, with a curious sense slender, well-knit figure was simply 1 of fright, that she was being drawn draped in clothing that was quietly toward this stranger. There was eloquent of breeding and taste. a mixed quality of hurt gentleness Within a surprisingly short time and some unplumbed depth in his she was completely at ease with ryes. "Miss Carol Howard," eho
Chapter Two
She liked
appreciaton of spoke
"Of course," he apologised. "You’ll be dining with your fiance." the good things she had bought for i “I hope you don't mind if I make •he apaitmcnt. From his convcrsur a note of it," he said. 'T make a comtion she soon learned that he was plete record of <(Vcrything I do in
wealthy, traveled, that he was seek- this book."
ing the apartment because the "What arc you putting down
neighborhood hi ought back his boy- now?”
hood. He told her that he was a ! "Dinner with Miss Carol Howard chemical engineer, but that his tonight," he said as he wrote, principal interest was amateur l "But really,” she protested, “I'm photography. 1 leaving for Baris the first thing in
Kate returned and went out again the morning."
for their tickets to Paris. Then the "Of course,” he apologized. "You'd bell rang again, and this time it be dinning with your fiance."
was Ronnie. Carol noted with mixed feelings that he was unchanged, just a bit older. He stared for a moment at her visitor, who suddenly remembered that he had not been introduced. "Lovell, Gerald Lovell is the name," he said with a laugh. With a meaningful glance at them, he said, “You must excuse me.” When he had gone, there wr.s a moment’s awkward pause. Before the conventional greetings were over, Carol launched into an < Xcitcd account of her good fortune.
Even after ho had gone, Carol could not get his eyes out of her mind. It was with a sense of pleasant surprise, then, that she glanced up from the gangplank of the channel steamer the following morning to see him tipping his hat to hjr from the deck. Kate was curious about Ijovcll’a being on the boat, inclined to read something into it. But Carol dismissed it as a simplo
coincidence.
On the crossing. Lovell cleverly engineered Kate out of the way
1
Ronnie was singularly unmoved by , a **0 became most persistent in hiu her good fortune, evidently troub-i a U e nGons to Carol, —la liked him
led by something.
"You're not Including me In this,
are you?” he asked.
“Why, of course, darling!” “But I have to be at the office
Monday to take over my new job.”
Then Carol understood that Bon-
ed not loss than 50 feet from center of the (intersecting road. ) Sight distances must be sufficient | to give safe access to the highway i without interference with passing
traffic.
Usually only two driveways connecting one establishment with the highway will he permitted on any one road. Each may be more than 30 feet In width at a point midway between the edge of the roadway and the right-of-way but this may be increased a sufficient amount to provide proper curvature for vehicles to turn easily. In no case where there is more than 60-foot frontage can the entire frontage be used as a driveway. Where curbs exist, each en trance or exit, must be confined to a maximum width of 30 feet at the rurb line.
Previews ami Reviews AT LOCAL THEATERS
Voncastle With Spencer Tracy. Gladys George and Franehot Tone in the leading roles, "They Gave Him A Gun” sfhowing Sunday, Monday and Tuesday at the Voncastle Theatre. The story deals with the effect of war on the psychology of youth, tracing the trunsetion of a kindly young clerk who goes through the war into a dangerous post-far racketeer. Tone starts as a clerk, is drafted and taught in wartare that "all men are equal with guns in their hands,” a maxim that leads him to crime and disaster in later life. Tracy plays the kindly sideshow barker, his buddy during the war, who attempts with Miss George to save the youth from his ultimate fate.
Granada "I Met Him In Paris,” which stars Claudette Colbert, Melvyn Douglas and Robert Young is showing Sunday, Monday and Tuesday at the Granada. In "I Met Him in Paris”, Miss Colbert, a young American girl in Paris on her vacation, is the object of the affections of both Douglas and Young, who portray, respectively, a playwright and a novelist. Both men are masters of the gentle art of tne "gag” but discover that the innocent little “gal from back home” is just a shade too fast on the comeback for them. Chateau “Love From A Stranger," the thrilling melodrama starring Ann Harding showing Sunday, Monday and Tuesday at the Chateau Theatre. Basil Rathbone is featured opposite Miss Maiding in this amazing story of a pretty London stenographer who married a fascinating stranger and then made a strange and horrible discovery about the man she thought she olved. Binnie Hal is also featured in the supporting cast which includes Bruce Setan, Jean Cadell and Donald Oalthrop.
OF
NOTICE OF 01 ALIUK ATION EXECUTOR No. 7916. Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned has duly qualified as Executor of the Last will and testament of Adelia Sommers deceased, in the Putnam Circuit Court, of Putnam County. Indiana, and has been duly authorized by sai l Court to administer said estate. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. June 11. 1937. Maggie Rogers. Executrix. Theo. Crawley. Attorney. Homer C. Morrison, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court. 12-3t.
Celebrates 112th Birthday J
for his sauvity, his gentle manner 3 and his knowledge of tho world. And she was, more than all, flattered by his attentions. Eo, when he asked for the privilege of allowing her Paris, his Paris, she reaiL'y
consented.
Even Kate became sharply awara
Die was hurt that all his efforts of the attractiveness of this siranga seemed to him to have dwindled IV 3 ’. 1, wllc o they started out on to nothing beside her crazy stroke *,° r ur cabaret life of fortune. She could not keep the Bans. He was their cons.ant irritation from edging into her companion. On tho:r second evevoice and very soon they were quar- n ' n F in . together, Carol turnrcling openly. Ronnie was deter- gleefully to Kate and asked her,
mined not to be a rich woman's 1 *| ke k* m • „
husband, was Intent on staying with ‘ m just crazy abou. him, Kate his job. She was exasperated at his 3 P°k e J*th enthusiasm D you adamant attitude. tno T w ’ better bo trotting back
, . to London before this affair turns , mo " ey E ono to y our into a triangle."
head, he shouted. They laughed at Kate’s quip.
"Oh. stop It Ronnie!” she anewered. “You’ve spoiled everything. 1 (To be continued)
'John Henry Davis Besides claiming the distinction of being the oldest person in Ohio, "Grandpa" John Henry Davis of Bainbndgb, O., maintains that he has more living descendants than any person in United States. His Immediate living family Includes 12 children, 49 grandchildren, 108 great-grandchildren and 18 great-great-grandchildren. He recently celebrated his 112th birthday and has voted in every election sinco 1846 with the exception of 1935 and chews tobacco.
