The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 January 1939 — Page 3

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THE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. MONDAY, JANTAHY 30, 1939.

Mtention • • • ouv Cavlcad Sale feature . . . world-famous OSTERRIOQR H2.50 Inner spring Mattress . . . at HORACE LINK & CO.

THK STORE OF FFRMTFIIE

| RE ( r.I.EBKATES j Lo be

MANAOEK’S WEEK Week 30 to February 4 has been < the annual week in hon[i.ianagers of the Great A | Company's stores, aecorjlouncement received here mlianapolis unit of which . is a part. Rex Thorl.^or of the Greeneastle 11 Ruark is in charge of

partment.

It a said A & P buyers v-i eks preparing for this Carload after carload of staple grocery mcr- , ,ii fruits and vegetables, !■:< d meat and fish have I Oil to the A 6 P outlets

featured during Manager’s

Not Quite News

Newspapers are being used to get over the message of the week dedicated to A & P manager? This is in line with the company policy of epending on this medium for the

hulk of its advertising. It is felt state for which he does book-blnd-that the housewives can be reached ing, all the Court House attaches more effectively through the news-: smiled. "Louie.” who is Louis J. paper columns. Further details on |Pahls, with a residence in fndiunaMnnager’s Week will be published in : polis, speaks the English tongue with

When "Lcuie” drifted into the Court House the other day, rn his j regular round of the counties of the,

this newspaper Thursday, which is the day on which A & P advertising

regularly appears.

Use Daily Banner Advertising . . . and Do a Selling Job with Dealers

and Consumers.

a rich intonation which gives a zest to his stories. Ho binds records, placing canvas covers on them, to pre-1 serve the old ones from damage In handling. He has had 34 years experience in the work, and can handle the hot glue pot and its accompany-j

WEESNER IMP. CO. 124 N. JACKSON ST. Have your tractor overhauled during January. 10% discount on parts and labor. 2 used regular Farmalls Matched team, 2 year olds. 1, 5 year old good worker. Some good UR"d discs and corn planter:!. Some good used trucks. New ow prices on New Farmutl • and ( ream Separators.

I FOP. SAt-E: Four hole cast iron ] Rockwood cookstove, burns wood I only.— $10.43. Furniture Exchange, l East Side Square. Phone 170-J. 30-In

FOK SALE: Maie com ng 4 years old; horse coming 5 years old. matched toim. Frank Raab, PI asant Gardens. 30-3p

For Rent

;V. . A

MSi

Kirter styles—better fabrics—bigger values than ever before! rocks that are so beautifully made and so smartly tri med that u’d expect them to cost much m ore! (Guaranteed fast color, you >1 another if yours fades’There are styles a d sizes for all, so loose yours today and SAVE!

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STYLE! VALUE!

QUALITY!

M ORt

SPRINGTIME DRESSES

I •;

Mm

C

E^o The mest delightful prints you’ve ever seen, in poplins, broadcloths, aspreys and 80-sqtuare percales. Racks and racks of becoming styles to choose from. And remember—they're all fast color! 14-52.

•vj

TUB FROCKS /

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j

Exceptional Values! 80-square percales — unmatched for style and quality at this low price! Sizes 14 to 52. A grand variety to choose from!

Ov

Another if it fades!

BRAND NEW STYLES!

BRENTWOOD FROCKS

SORORITY RAYON PRINTS! WONDER RAYON CREPES!

Extra quality! Exceptional variety! These dresses are made ,08

and trimmed like much higher priced ones, dome in, try some They’re the biggest values ever!

on.

IT,

LIFE BELTS SAVED TEN—Here are the life belts that saved the ten survivors ot the ill-fated British flying boat Cavalier, being Inspected by Coast Guardsmen ot the cutter Champlain, after arriving in New York. The Guardsmen above manned a life boat to transfer their pharmacist's mate. L. D. Cochran, right foreground. to the rescue ship. Esso Baytown.

For Sale

New 13-plate battery, guaranteed 0 months, $3.90 exchange. Get our prices on Lee tires before you buy. Scott’s Franklin Street GaragePhone 08. 22 tr

Busch Monument Works K. liOeust in ( etuelcry Bd^Ph. 140^ FOP. SALE: Baled hay, alfalfa, clover and timothy. Charles Hurst, j Cloverdale. 27-4p. ! FOR S u.L: 3 y ai ling He ref or i steers. Frank Terr, phone 6F14.

2.8-2p

New 39-Plate Battery. $3 95 ex- , ihange. Free installation. Dobbs Tire &• Battery Service Phone 789. M-W-F-U FOR SALE: Two, 1A Kodaks. One with HR lens and the other with ’ Anas'igmnt lens. All equipment with ' both Low prices. Phone 188. J. P. Allen Jr. 28-31-2t | FOR SALE: Good clover and timoi thy mixed hay. D. O. Durtlavy, Fill-

FOR RENT: Seven roam modern ! house at 14 I^irraboe street, phone 214. E. A. Browning. 19-:f FOR RENT: 3 furnished or unfurnlr hod rooms. Quiet home, cheap ; rent. G04 Maple avenue. 30-2p. —Wanted— ! WANTED to buy 30 to 00 acres. Improved or unimproved. Must l>e cheap. Then. Jimcison. Box 278. R. rre Haute. 28-28-30 3p. WANTED to buy sh' a Is from id to 80 lbs., Carl Higgle, Roachdale. Phone Bainbridge. 25-Gp WANTED: Any kind of dead stock. Call 278, Greeneastle. Charges paid. John Wachtel Co. cod. WANTED to buy White English Leghorn eggs for hatching. Margarc. Iiuvcrly. Greeneastle. R. 1.

26-30-2p.

; WANTED to rent farm from 80 to j 160 acres. Box R, Banner. 30-3p. HOW WOULD YOL LIKE TO | OWN a coffee agency netting you up to $45 first we k? I 11 show you | hew. No experience needed. Oner- | ate on my capital. Details mailed I free. MILLS. 7010 Monmouth. CinI cinnnti, O. 30-lp. '; SD: V torol in good <-‘>n■itk a. State make and price. Ad- | lire's Box A, Care cf Benner. 30-2p. WANTED TO BUY BEES. Prefer standard equipment, but will buy in any kind of hives. Address J. it. Epperson, Roachdale, Ind. 30-3t WANTED: Job on farm by young married man, experienced. Lloyd Griswold. Roachdale, R. 2. 30-l-2-3p. WANTED to rent farm 80-100 acres. Have own equipment. Robert Watson. R. 1, Greeneastle. 30-lp.

30-lp

SIGN OF THE TIMES—First brush takes place in Washington, D. C., in a nation-wide campaign for ‘‘Less Taxes, More Jobs." as George H. Davis. President of the United States Chamber of Commerce. pastes up this huge sign. Similar posters—about 23.000 in all—have been prenared for outdoor signboards throughout the

country, to displ y the slogan of the campaign.

PUBLIC SALE OF POLAND ] CHINA BRED GILTS AND SOWJ. | Thursday, Feb- 2. 1939 will sell !0

WANTED: Home grown, little red clover peed. C. W. Sigler, Greeneastle. R. 1. Brick Chapel. Mon-Wed-tf If you have light car, nre free to travel, arc interested in good immediate earnings an I connection with no investment. $3.00 a day to start. See H. P. Knosalla evenings. 209 scuth Indiana street. 30-3p.

-Miseelto neons—

ing brush without smoa-dig the contents outside of the place where he wants the glue. This trip, "Louie" brought a few little gifts to office holders in the Court House, one of thrm being a very black faced Dinah who can walk toeteringiy down a slight incline, who found a home in the recorder’s office, and in other offices there are other gifts, brougnt by "Louie.” They all help make the days more cheerful, for the recipients.

Furniture repairing neatly don?, . work guaranteed, free estimates,

head of bred gilts and sows, Thurn- Furniture Exchange, East Side day. Feb. 2. 1939 at farm one mile Square Phone 170 .j 3o.i„ south of Mt. Meridian, ten miles 5,600-acre southeast of Greencnslle, Ind., seven ■ USE DAILY BANNER ADVER-

square m les, is part of

site near lure owned by W. H. m iieg northeast of Clovcrdaile Powell, lumberman and foimer im- These sows are bred to outstandycr of St. James, which is 100 miles j n g boars. They are choice Individsouthwest of St. Louis. ua i g 0 f tb e Big Mellow easy feeding Approximately 40 000 oaks, many fyp 0 Polands from Prolific Ancesof the m from two to four feet In tory. Sale to be under shelter. NOBLE I diameter, will be cut. sawed into aLLEE & SON. Auct. Col J. N. I staves at a sawmill here, and sold, Fran j ti Morton, 111. and Alton Hurst. I James said a crew of 40 nun is fell- Greeneastle. Ind. 28-2t i Ing trees, and will be kept at work

VISING FIRST Because Reads The Banner First.

Everybody

PRIMITIVE OAKS OF OZAKKS CUT FOB DISTILLERY

ST. JAMES. Mo. <r|Pi—Giant ok trees in a 1.600-acre primitive Ozark forest- one of Missouri’s few remaining stands of virgin timber are being cut to make whisky ba--

rtil staves.

The forest, comprising about tftrae Adopted.

for a year. In addlton to the white and bur caks, 'a’g: ash, sycamore, maple, elm and walnut trees grow in abun-

dance.

Powell’s land adjoins the site of Meramec Springs, on > of the largest in the state and one of the beauty spots of the Ozarks. Becaus' of its scenic beauty the entire area w .s suggested several years ago as r. state park, but the proposal was not

NEW 39-Plate Goodyear Buttery $3.95 Exchange. Niue Months guarantee. Free Installation. & Battery Service Phono 78!)

FOR SALE: 9 shoats, weight close to 70 Ihr:. George Irwin I % miles northwest Mt. Meridian. 27-3p. FOR SALE: My Buick uitomobile. You see it on the streets every day and know that it is in good order. Will deliver it sonutinu during the first week of Apr '. J. P. Allen Jr. Phone 188. 28-31-2-3t 1 FOR SALE: Twin cribs, maple, J excellent condition. Phone 315-J. |

28-L’.

, , FOR SALE: 24 head nice shoats, ‘ weight about 100 Its. Alfred Stone, Mt. Meridian. 30-3p.

FOR SALE: Bronze tom an I ten : turkeys. 4'i miles east Greeneastle. ' Geo. Smiley. 30-lp. >.: SALE: Tea if gray maree, j two and three years old. Both In i foal and well broke. Amos Fine, 5 j miles southeast on Airport Road. 30-2p.

WILKES BOOTH “DEATH PISTOLS” CLAIMED BY 200 TUSCALOOSA. Ark. .'UP'—More than 200 pistols with which Abraham L'ncoln was killed arc in existence, if the stories cf their owners are to

bo believed.

This is the statement of Prof. Frank J. Foster, of the University of Alabama faculty, who for 12 years had been collecting old firearms an 1 reading about them. “Often the possessors of the Lincoln pistols get confused in their chronology and exhibit as the fatal w. apon one which was not even made until years after the assassination of the Civil War President.’’

Foster said.

Foster is wary of most of the tales about old firearms and their reputed fenner owners. He said the story • run associated with a gun sometimes untrue and the sentiment attuchf to it, frequently increases its value in the opinion of the owner. Foster's collection includes about 40 early American and European pistols, ranging from vest pocket models to .G0-caliber “horse pistols.” His special interest in old Colt re\olvers has netted him several at least 100 years old. His collection include:) "potter boxes.” with six-in-ono barrels, French “pin-fires” and

c!:' flintlocks.

One of the most interesting phases cf collecting. Foster points out, is the primitive means of exchange so often resorted to in bartering and

trading.

FOR SALE: Drop hea l sewing machine, $10.75. Throe mirror vanity dre'-'ser, $6.50. Jeff res Berry Street. 30-lp

THIS WEEK S WEATHER

Real Estate

THREATEN DETROIT TIE-UP—Feud between Teamsters Union and Brewery Workers Union threatened a city-wide trucking tie-up of Detroit. Skirmishes occurred in which at least 25 persons were injured Above, a group of brev.+ry warkirfe halt wi .automobile that attempted to enter a brewery yard. City ouiclals intervened in the proposed strike to prevent tie-up of city s food supply.

FOR SALE: Seven acres with seven room house, new bain and garage. Electricity. Located in small town U. S. Highway in Putnam County. J. T. Christie, Real Estate, 22 S. Jackson

30-3t

l isljijeqt.

If You Want Sales

Sncw flurries in Ohio Valley Monday and tain over south and rain or snow over north portion Wednesday cr Thursday, otherwise generally fa'r. Much colder Monday: warmer by Wednesdiy; colder Thursday or Thursday night and warmer Saturday.

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