The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 September 1939 — Page 4

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER

CHATEAU

Midnight Show Tonight 11:30 SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY

For Sale—

FOR SALK: Cider. Grimes, Jonathan, and Delicious apples at Buchheit Orchards. 13-tf

FOR SALE: Cider. Also fine large Grimes Golden, 50c per bushel. McCullough Orchard. 16-tf

FOR SALE: Beds and back rests. Call 800. 22-3t.

with CHESTER MORRIS LUCILLE BALL WENDY BARRIE JOHN CARRADINE ALLEN JENKINS JOSEPH CALLEIA C. AUBREY SMITH KENT TAYLOR PATRIC KNOWLES ELISABETH RISDON

FOR SALE: Apples. All kinds 25c and 50c. Harley Harris, Cemetery Road. 20-22-23-3p. FOR SALE OR TRADE: 1936 •' Ford tudor. Motor reconditioned. $285. Inquire at Banner. 21-3p.

FOR SALE: Fresh cider, Northern Spys, Senators, King David, Delicious, and Grimes Golden apples. McCullough’s Orchard. 22-tf. I

FOR RENT: Three room complete- I ly furnished apartment. Inquire at ' Banner. 22-3p. FOR RENT: 3 unfurnished rooms. First floor, for couple. 72S E. Seminary. Phone 594-M. 23-lt. FOR RENT: Three or four room unfurnished apartment with bath. 808 south Indiana street. 23-lt.

FOR RENT: Lockridge apartment. Unfurnished, first floor. Good location. Phone 416-W. 12-tf

By VICTOR WALTER

INDIANA’S FISH AND WHAT THEY LOOK LIKE

The Sunfishes

I ... of a)1 the sunfishes

FOR RENT: Two four room and ( Most popular ... - ( two five room modern apartments. j S the blurgill. It is a'so one of the i S. C. Sayers, Phone 96-R. 23-3t. J larger: of Uie family, excepting onlv the black basses. The bluegill grows ; Wanted— ! to neaily two pounds in weight, but

MAN WITH CAR

profitable HEBERLING Route nearby locality. Must be industrious

to continue 1 normally a good-sized bluegill would j|

i n be one eight inches long. Bluegills w iU change in color with their en-

and satisfied with earnings of $25 to | vironment, as will most other fish. | $30 a week at start. Give age and The bluegill as a flat fish, with a type of car. Write G. C. HF7BER- ; small mouth, its ’’ear’' being a very LING CO., Bloomington, Illinois, | dark blue or black, with bars, some-

Dept. 610. 22-2t. SALESMAN WANTED by well known oil company. Man over thirty preferred. Experience not neces-

sary. Immediate steady income for reco{ , n i ZP d by its "ear'’ which has a '.

man with car. 573 Standard

Ohio.

Write P. T. Webster, Building, Cleveland.

23-lp.

--of

FOR SALE: Westinghouse elettric range, owned by H. E. Robbins. Excellent condition. May be seen at Cherry’s Transfer office. Bargain if sold at once. 22-3p. FOR SALE: 12 head Native Here"ford calves. Fine baby beef feeders. Phone 646-W. J. W. Herod. 21-23-2p.

ripe pumpkins at $3.50 per ton delivered to us at Ladoga. Ladoga Can-

ning Co., Ladoga Indiana.

WANTED: Married man to work j on farm. W. G. Whitted, R. 1. 2 miles west Morton. 21-3p. !

FOR SALE: Milk goats, giving good flow of milk. Thomas Barthol-

omew, Roachdale.

24-30-2p.

—Miscellaneous— All partnership accounts with Dr.

W. M. O’Brien and Dr. C. B. O’Brien

FOR SALE: Registered Shropshire j are now due and payable to Dr. W. M.

yearlings and ram lambs. High class. John W. Day, Fillmore, Indiana.

2-9-16-23-30-5p.

FOR SALE: Six room house on two lots, Howard street. Semi-mod-ern. $500 cash. Phone 75-R. 23-Op.

**C'*' 0 v -r-

RADIO Plctux#^ 1

\V> i0 “ v

FOR SALE: Apples and cider. | Special price for Sunday on Grimes and Jonathan. 3 bu. for $1.00. McFarlane farm, north edge of Greencastle on state road 43. Bring containers. Bennett, Mgr. 23-lp.

|| FOR 142-J.

SALE: Baby bed.

Phone 23-lt.

GIVES PAPER AT REUNION ( ('out i ii from I’ujfe On»** now Bartlesville, Oklahoma. They, with Uncle Robert and Uncle Bascom started ranching in that new country under the firm of O’Hair Brothers and Black and their brand, O + B, was registered in the annual round up brand books of that time. Their ranch was located not far from the bad lands that was a hideout for the horse thieves, cattle rustlers and renegade Indians of that era. In her new homeland mother had but one white neighbor and the rest of the settlers were Indians. Those who were Cherokees were good neighbors but there were others that lacked all of the good qualities of a neighbor. The next move was made further west into the Cheroke Strip on the northern line of Old Oklahoma Territory. Their post office. Hunnewell, Kansas, was the south terminus of the Santa Fe railroad and the north end of the cattle trail from Texas, a combination that made it a typical cow town as wild as any and wilder than some. There still stands at Hunnewell the little rock school house where father gathered together and taught the first Sunday school class organized in that coun-

try.

When they had been in this location a few years, the public clamor for this land to be opened for settlement became so great and the depredations of the squatters so annoying that O’Hair Brothers and Black decided that it was time to move. In 1887 they sold their entire holdings. Uncle Robert and Uncle Bascom returned to Indiana and father and mother moved to Wellington. Kansas. In Wellington, father entered business, invested in wheat lands, I was born ,an<l in spite of grasshopper plagues, hot winds, cyclones and my birth, they lived and prospered each year until 1911. Mother’s health had never been the best and they had spent winters in Florida, Old Mexico and California looking for a mild winter climate. In 1911 father re-

tired from active business and they moved to Pasadena where they still live, at 637 North Raymond aveune. happy and in reasonable health. Mother is now past 84 years old, weighs about 100 pounds, is brim full of indomitable spirit bequeathed her by her remarkable father and mother, loves you all and would have been here today to tell her own story, with a wealth of detail, much better than I have If she had been a little younger. She continues to live happily, actively, busy with

FOR SALE: Good piano. Young Filling Station.

Jesse 23-lp

FOR SALE: Upright piano and spinet desk. 427 Anderson street. 23-lt.

FOR SALE: One good used heatrota. Leslie Cooper, 5 miles south on road 43. 22-2p.

FOR SALE: 18 pigs. 3F4. Guy Riggs.

Call rural-22-3ts.

—Real Estate—

home, at peace with the whole world and satisfied with life in general and her’s and father’s in particular and Margaret Permelie. O’Hair Black will continue on that way until that

time.

FOR SALE: Five room house, bath. Four blocks from business section. Price $1800.00. Down payment $500.00, balance like rent. J. her t. Christie, Real Estate. 21-3t.

GRAND JURY REPORT

Don’t Miss The BIGGEST RODEO Ever At The Monnett Ranch Tomorrow

(Coiitliiii«»«l from I'ntce On«*k son, Joseph Orr, Jeremiah DeVoro Nathan Plunkett, Samuel Duroe, and Wm. B. Evans. Some of these men wee ancestors of the present residents o: Putnam county. The John Rawley who served on the petit jury may have been a c'ose relative of former Judge John M. Rawley, of Brazil, who was born in Putnam county. The judges of the Putnam court at that time were Jacob Call, Esq., president judge of the first judicial circuit, and George Kirkpatrick an 1 Purcell Chance, Esqs., associate judges.

FOR SALE: Suburban residence and acreage on the pavement and in walking distance of town. 3. C. Sayers, Phone 96-R. 23-3t.

FOR SALE: One of the best residence properties in Greencastle. Close in and quick possession. S. C. Sayers, Phone 96-R. 23-3t.

—For Rent—

FOR RENT: Three room modem furnished apartment. 423 east Franklin street. 21-23-21.

FOR RENT: Sleeping room and garage. 308 north College avenue. 23-lp.

FOR RENT: Two front sleeping rooms for either business men or women. Garage available. Phone 142-J, eod

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Putnam County. State of Indiana. Executor of the will of George P. Winans late of Putnam County, deceased. State estate is supposed to be solvent. Ralph Winans, Executor No. 8134. Sept. 7, 1939. Homer C. Morrison, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court. 9-3t.

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed bv I the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Putnam County, State of Indiana. | Executor of the will of Ernest Stoner late of Putnam County, dedeased. Said estate is supposed to be sol-

I vent.

No. 8135. Madonna Stoner, Executor j Sept. 8, 1939. Homer C. Morrison, Clerk of the . Putnam Circuit Court. I Attorney M. J. Murphy. 0-3t.

FOR RENT: Unfurnished modern 5 room apartment. Heat and watet furnished. Near college and city schools. Fine neighborhood, pleasant place to live. Phone 599-J. 5-tf.

FOR RENT: 10 acre farm with good improvements on Zinc Mill Road. See Sam Budich, Fox Ridge, No. 74. 21-3t.

Dance GRANT HOTEL Sat. Nitfht—Sept. 23 MUSIC BY DIXIE FOUR OF TERRE HAUTE •Cover Charge 25c Each Clara A. Beggs, Prop.

O’Brien, the surviving partner, at his office in the Alamo Building. (Signed) Dr. W. M. O’Brien, Surviving Partner. 18-6t.

Pump repair and plumbing. Com-

a very \

game fish, fully as game as a blue- 1 gi'l, and like the bluegill will take 18-12t. artificial as well as natural bait. One of the most popular sunfishes ! is the rock bass, known also as the red-eye and goggle-eye. It seems to grow larger or more rapidly in ! southern Indiana than in the’ northern and central parts of the state. As fly-fishing increases, the demands for rock bass also increase, as it will rise to an artificial fly. 1 The rock bass grows to nearly two l pounds in weight, but the average for northern Indiana is only a few ‘ ounces and for southern Indiana av- I erage probably will not exceed a

plete line shallow well and deep well | quarter of pound The figh is rath _

electric pumps. Cline Ratcliff,

Greencastle,

Falls.

R. 4. Phone

Clinton

19-6p.

Free dirt for hauling. Call 768-J.

23-3ts.

Previews and Reviews

AT LOCAL THEATERS

er flat and wide, but not so flat as a bluegill. It is rather thick. The head, mouth and the eye are large J and the eye is blotched with red. In ; color the rock bass is greenish and j brassy with dar k blotches. Each ‘ soale has a dark spot on it. The two crappies are often found in the same waters. Both are rather soft fish and not good fighters though often taken on artificial lures. The black croppie is often •catled the calico bass, and is likely to be found in lakes and ponds. The white croppie is light in color, sometimes almost silvery, and is a fish of the streams, being found about old stumps, big boulders and in eddies. Both are very destructive to the other fish and both have large mouths. Both are flat fishes and they are not so thick as a bluegill. Both take artificial lines and both grow to a ayeight of more than a pound and a length of more than fourteen inches. The blark croppies is a silvery alive color with mottles of greenish color

over the whole body.

. . ' 7 . . | The common sunfish and longeared The outstanding toughies of screen u . s a history, James Cagney and George ft h a,e two ver y colorful memRaft, are teamed in “Each Dawn I 1 * )ers family and. for their size, Die, a picture dealing realistically very game. They are excellently with life in a big prison which opens | flavored and If only larger would be Sunday and Monday at the Granada I B , Theatre. ; P 0 P ula ' with grownup anglers. The

Chateau

Eleven persons make a bumpy but safe landing in a jungle clearing when their plane is forced down in a storm. A month later the crippled plane takes off with but five of the nine survivors aboard, leaving the others to a speedy death. This, briefly, is the story of "Five Came Back” the remarkable offering which comes Sunday, Monday and Tuesday to the Chateau Theatre. The drama of the eleven lives of the marooned party, trapped between impenetrable swamps and tribes of savage head-hunters, as they live and love and fight and work and make sacrifices starring Chester Morris, Lucille Ball, Wendy Barrie, John Carradine and Allen

Jenkins. Granada

It is a frank, grim, brutal and tremendously exciting story to which these two premier bad men of the screen have lent their talents, and if they were tough before, they are vertible hell cats now. Each in his own way outdoes everything in the line of vicious characterization he has ever done before. Yoncastle Following his success in “The Citadel,’’ Robert Donat again returns to the screen, this time as the lovable schoolmaster of “Goodbye, Mr. Chips,” filmization of James Hilton’s famous novel. The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer picture, filmed in England, comes Sunday to the Voncastle Theatre. With Donat comes a colorful new feminine lead in Greer Garson, beautiful English actress recently signed by the studio. The story, with a romantic love theme, has a new angle in the glorification of the work and influence of the profession of teaching. Donat plays the title role, a British schoolmaster. His work, his romance, the tragedy of the death of his wife, his shaping of careers of future great men, are the dramatic elements.

B A INBRIDGE Mr. and Mrs. Ray Miller and Mr::. Dolby Collings visited Miss Gladys McFadden in the hospital at Indianapolis on Wednesday. Bobby Michael, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Michael has enrolled in Central Normal College in Danville, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Flickenger of Rockville spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs Victor W’alter. Mr. Flickenger is game warden from Rockville. Miss Tessie Steele and girl friend of Indiana University sepnt the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Steele. Mrs. Clay Allgood of Lafayette is visiting Mrs. Emma Allgood and other relatives here this week. Ernest Steele has accompanied

longeated sunfish will be recognized j by its long ear. The common sunfish is a brilliantly colored, small

sunfish of streams and lakes and needs no detailed description. The green sunfish is a large- I

mouthed member of the group, very ' game and very destructive to other

fish. Though soft to the touch when

caught, its flesh is good food and it glows to a size of possibly seven or right inches in Indiana. A green sun-

fish only four inches long will often be caught on a No. 1 bass bug. The

gieen sunfish has a dirty green color. Its mouth is very large. Down its

face will be found zig zag lines of a light blue, which are characterisic

of this fish.

Though the text books say it is not common in lakes, there are many Indiana lakes where it is found For example, It will bo taken from the stumps on Lake Wawasee, largest lake In the state. It also will’ be found very plentiful in Albius Lake The commonly called black pond perch is not a perch In any way but is a member of the sunfish group

and is in fact, the

green sunfish.

his uncle on a business and pleasure trip through California. While there they will visit the worlds fair. Mary McCaughey has gone to Lafayette where she is a student at Purdue University. Mrs. Maggie Hall Is spending tin winter with her brother Depew Goff of Russellville. Mr. and Mrs. Harley Miller and son Hal and Mary Etcheson spen: the week end at Hoosier Highlands. While Mrs. Miller and son and Mary were out in the boat on Sunday morning a fair sized bass jumped out of the water into their boat causing them quite a little excitement.

THE GREATEST HEARTdi,, OF YOUR WHOLE LIFET||J f,.* fr.«t.r Ik.* This entertainment tiu] place among the i 0 J works of the screen Rnin DONAT'S unforgetS ■i* Chips".. GREER GARSqm §. heart-warming “KaiJ] ’ ’ ’ reac h dazzling J heights of emotional

Jumit Hflton'i

times very indistinct, running acros* the side of the body up and down. , with or without copper color on the '

belly,

The

i!

i

red-eared sunfish is easily , ? -j

has a

rod or pink margin around it. Little seems to be known about it outside Indiana, but in this state it is one of | b ’i the most popular pan fish and j * ' ana seems to be the only state that

ilk X

j V. J

Sell your old auto bodies, fenders sneet scrap, wire. 1200 E. Maryland.

Indianapolis, Indiana. AMERICAN j propagates it. O’d text books say it COMPRESSED STEEL CORP. I grows to six or seven inches, but red- I ■ " j ears have been caught that weigh

We are now receiving good yellow we u over a pound. He

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