The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 November 1940 — Page 4

ANo '! (iood ShnrtH ( hap. 1* “IUCK TKA( A" Kiddies, Pop Corn and l'ri/.'’s Saturday Saturday Midnight SUN., MON., TI ES. CARY GRANT

ikem; DUNNE

"THE AWFUL TRUTH” A LuiikIi Riot, Don't Mis> It

if your car has starting trouble as the weather gets colder, there is one sure-fire prescription HIGHER TEST (more volatile) GASOLINE That's a perfect description of Phillips 66 Poly Gas. During the coining winter months, you can confidently expect . . . based on past experience... that the Volatility Number (high test rating) of this amazing motor fuel will be 50 per cent higher than the average Volatility Number of premium price gasolines. Think of it! Most motor fuels, including those which cost 2i extra per gallon, will not come within hailing distance of the volatility given by Phillips 66 Poly Gas, which sells at regular price. If you wonder how

Find out for yourself how this extra high test gasoline gives extra fast starting, even after your car has been standing all night in the cold. Note the faster warm-up. Feel the improvement in power and pick-up. And don't forget, you get more mileage, because you save the gasoline usually wasted by excessive use of the choke with low test motor fuel. Tonight, get a trial tankful of extra high test Phillips 66 Poly Gas, without paying a penny extra. Then tomorrow', you can touch the button and Start everytime, no matter how cold the day.

l- MT. MERIDIAN d g. -f- -!• •!• -I- -!• -l- -I- T- Q Mrs. Lucille Whitman was hostess to the Good Cheer Club Thursday afternoon. Miss Shirley Patrick spent the week end with Misses Betty and Ruby Allee. Mrs. Ida Newman and Mrs. Krona Tincher are home from the Methodist hospital, and are improving nicely. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Nichols were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Merril Nichols of Stilesville. Mrs. Lola Grubb spent Saturday night with Miss Hazel Meek. Mrs. Willis Blue was in Indianapolis Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Terry, Miss Fern 1 and relatives from Jasonville were j

Phill-up with Phillips for

<lE3!E22Si

Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McCammack. Harvey Buis spent Tuesday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Newraan. Mrs. Ida Cox spent Saturday with Mrs. Jennie -Buis. Mrs. Gladys Elmore spent Friday afternoon with Mrs. Corda Butler. Mr. and Mrs. Freddie Skinner of Columbus. Mrs. Alda Coffman and son Rex, Miss Betty Chadd and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Skelton w'ere Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Butler and Eugene. Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Frazier. Barbara Ann and Robert, called on Mr. and Mrs. Lee Cox Sunday evening. Mrs. Kenneth Morrison and sons.

Miss Ella Tilley and Mary Hick-; i days last week with Hugh Hicks and spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and ! family. Mrs. Reuben Heavin.

Noble Hurst spent Monday with home folks. Miss Stella Terry was in Greencastle Tuesday. Funeral services were conducted by Rev. Wilbur Day, for Wiley Foster, Sunday afternoon, at the home, with burial in the New Providence cemetery. Mrs. Laura Tharp and Mrs. Effio Smith spent Sunday with Mrs. Ida Allee. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wells are moving from the Wiley Mark property here to Fillmore. Mrs. Mabel Heavin spent a few

LAST KITES HELD Funeral services were held Monday for William Clarence Oakley, a farmer of Eel River township, in Hendricks county, with interment in the North Salem cemetery. He died Saturday in tlm Methodist hospital. The deceased was born at Bainbridge, the son of James and Ellen Oaklty, August 5. 1877. He was married to Eva Otie Chadd August 16, loots, who prtcedtd him September 3, 1923. In June of 1936 he married Nellie Davidson of St. Petersburg, Fla. He joined the Methodist church of New Maysville in 1893

Plus: LOONEY TI NE CARTOON & POPFLAK SCIENCE & COLOR CRI ISE TONIGHT & SATURDAY Continuous Com 2 Saturday BALCONY 20c V ONCASTLF ‘Where the Crowds Go'

I ( JH Hog Outlook Of Interest Here

: &

Automatic

tore

ru

WATER HEATING

"orwA,

Proven to cost only a few PENNIES per day!

' A-At

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111

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SAVE l/ 3 THE COST of AUTOMATIC Hot Water on the New NATURAL GAS Rates On the new rates that went into effect when Natural Gas was introduced you can enjoy Automatic water heating at much less cost . . . the total cost for cooking and water heating is only a little more than your service bill for cooking alone has been. At this low cost the convenience of having hot water always on tap is a real bargain ... a very few cents a day will pay for it. You can forget about all the bother of heating water by old-fashioned, time-consuming methods—with an Automatic a turn of the faucet is all you ever do to

get hot water.

Let us explain how simply and quickly Automatic hot water can be installed in your home. You can pay for the equipment with small monthly payments. Install an Automatic GAS Water Heater in Your Home Today! NORTHERN INDIANA POWER COMPARY

STATE 151 L1.ET1.N INDICATES HIGHER AVERAGE DURING COMING YEAR Putnam county hog raisers, who I are charged for taxation purposes with having considerably more than ' 3200 000 invested in animals of thav , land, are interested in a state butletI in on the prospects of the hog mar ket. That report indicates a higher av J rage during 1941 than during the ; present year. Smaller market supplies of hogs are expected in the comi ing year, and there is to be an in- ; creas.d demand for pork products, it 1 is believed. It is expected the numbers of hogs will be kept level with last year on farms where Led supplies are avallj able or in areas where corn may b-? | purchased at comparatively reason* ; able prices. “Hogs appear at this time to offer the gi aL;>t likcUliood of price improvement in 1941 of any of the major farm commodities,” says the report. Market supplies of hogs are ex-

i <i tiuissmvt'iis- < i on i;\. i'iinm: «(!•• \i 1:1.n ri<>>

I'olliiK inn is .1 list nf , hiims mi f

in the nfHiv of tin. Auditor nf I'titn; 1 tnint \ tu li,. nllvwi-d l,y t |n> Hn,,rd ui >'nmnilssloni i . ;it the- ndjout tn-d ninet- ' ,l '! tr iVi'ii' 1 " N 0 '‘"hjer Term, November

I mini> Keyeiilie l-'iinil 1 Inim,

1’nnl .1 1'iileiinin. iMt.'iO, Walter St wart. Ili.rm: f C. Uyan. »:.l.r Vilen I'iKKerr. Iinnald c llvtrn.

Frank Gardner. IHI s». Innnis

t'lmlfelter. txl .’iO; Frank K rn.ip. •* x r.x'i: I,'mis Williams, $',( ‘ai; I'lanii, 1.1 ebesnn. Jasper 10. |•ruetar > I .M), Fail Sntlierlin. $ 11.2.*,; Win. F iOit.et. J1 ...ai; Marinn Sears. I?-’ 7V .Ma it in I. NIcIhiIh, $7x.:.n. l.evl llastv' ‘ t Ml, t >la T lOllis. *:,lDO; Uny n] >•' ‘ekle\ $71' D; i-’rank Jlivnel $1t.',n let, lli.l.sap'le, $16.00; flien Kaali' 4 ■ ' 00; t'lmrles Itenfrn. $t0. Je-i AleKaniey. txti.Mi; Kay l.a' kln. $:,r, r,i» kennetli .Mm-rlsmi, $00.M); 1011 wa rd Seiinlz, $:.7 J'l; Kstill M> ek. $ 1!0 76 ;• «i i la \ is. $110 X0; C. M. Mlekel, t.v,'.-,(i linns |. liamlltmi, $7x.:,fl. tillliert I, Unyers. $x'.:,ti. ciiarli- ,v .Marshall $11 'll. A- is tot ter. $x', -,a ■/.,,] MeIntyie. $67.Ml; 11. () Moffetti *.‘.4 .-.O J'dtn At" I, $71.00, Sam Henry, $7:t.s;,

Gilbert 10 (tabs. Andltcr nf Putnam t'ounty, [ml. H-lt

Mil'll I) III' MMIIMS'I || \ rillN

(civet

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tor

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umlersigned has l»eon appointed by

.I -hIl;, of I be Uircuit f’mirt of Puiniim

m y. State of Indiana, Admin 1st ra- • tbe estate t*f C'barlcs K. •'aldwull t« of i'utnam County, deceased Slid estate is supposed to b e solvent Minnie A. Caldwell. Admiulsti

»v. 7. I!• 10. Homer C.

Putnam Circuit Court Attorney C. C. Gillen.

Noiici: or ri\\i. MMTi.rMr.vr

or KJtTATK

notici: is hkrkhy given to tl»e C|. (litors, Heirs and Legatees of Nora Garner. tbM-t-ased to aptiear in tin* Putnam Circuit Court. In Id at Greeneastle Indiana, on the Mnh day of November' nxAi:" SKVVuoxiKv^ ^

Minnie A.

Nov. 7. 1940.

nier C MorHson. Ckrk of the

v. itli tile estate of said dectabmt sbouiu not be approved; and said belts are notified to then and there make proof Of b«*lr Ship, and receive their distrib-

utive shares.

Jennie Hutcheson and

WIT NI ’ SS. 111 1 ,'.' n e‘r k M nf 'snl r'SH r t N ”'s h lHff 1 ' ^ wve,n,)er ' 1940. Homer r. MorrUon, Clerk Putnam

Circuit Court.

Lyon &t Abrams, Ally. g.2 t

Saturday Midnight

SUN., (Bargain

MOIL, TUBS. | V ONCASIlj Matinee Monday 20ej f ‘Where the ( roads G(|

pected to be approximately 10 per cent less for the year opening October 1. 1940, than for the year beginning October 1, 1939. The report of the tax assessors of the county for the assessment of this last spring, on file in the office of Putnam County Assessor Robert L. Pierce, gives a total of nearly 34.000 head of hogs owned in the county at the time of the spring assessment. These were valued for taxation purposes at $207,154. However, 7,226 head of this total were sows, and litters of pigs with the sows were not listed by the assessors, according to custom, so that these numbers of head of swine cannot be considered an accurate census of them.

DOUBLE FEATURE | 20c MAIN—15c BALCI

BEFORE 1 J I HANG gp 1 with IVElYb Kf«S ■f ’: ettoa MbNETT .1 —PLUS-

.Q -{• T •!• -I- -]• •!• -I- -i* -I* *9 ty ; 9* CLOVEUDALE, ROUTE ONE 4 ^4*4* + *F*I , *i**9 4-4 , 4*4 , + 4*^ Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wright and Junior of Indianapolis and Mr. and Mrs. IMlip G. Helm of Greeneastle spent Suntlay evening with Mr. anti Mis. Fred K. Hansel and family. Mr. an.l Mrs. Cletus Harggerty cf Indianapolis spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Wamsley. Mr. and Mrs. Allan Wamsley ot Indianapolis spent the week end 0:1 ] his farm. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Barton spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Fred K. Hansel. M'\ and Mrs. Allan Wamsley, Mr. an l Mrs. Cletus Harggerty of Indianapol.s, Jack Wamsley and Mary June spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Wamsley, USE DAILi tJANNfiR ADVER- | ilMNG FIRST And Do a Real Sell- !

Htf ,lnh

VICTORV j 5 Jt - ' ‘

t'/J sis:... Also: ( luipter 8 of “WIN M LS OB TUB 5'f

TONIGHT & SATURDA1 ('oittiittiutlx If ' it I g R A N A 0 “llu I .mill,' Thoalrt"KIDD" : I PI PRIZES I ILL 3 SAIIIP

Mrs. W. I Wamsley ^

Mrs. Fted K 1

We Suggest

New Curtains ami Draperies!

If you’re interested making your home mortl ' pleasant... in creating t I enchanting freshness o I spring during the \\int <r l months... we suggest ne<l curtains and draperies your windows. They'll ^ I untold beauty to y 0 ®l home, and make “' ta - vin n f “” more fun than eV I

before

CURTAINS

Beautiful meshes and marquisette*, prlscilla, pam’l ‘ cj| New and cracker crisp. Extra long and extra wide. "

very reasonable.

DRAPERIES Stripes, gay patterns, plain colors. Over one Inimlr' 11 I" . choose from. Made to your specifications. Saii^ a<lu anteed. Prices are very reasonable. HORACE LINK & COfllP^ Drapery Department-First Floor