The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 March 1944 — Page 3
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA,
MONDAY, MARCH 6, 1944.
FOR RENT
Sale-
FOR RENT: 3 room apartment over the Granada Theatre. Light heat furnished. Apply Karl Sutherlin % Voncastle. 3.3p
Get your tieketa at Ed Hamilton's' for Thursday night for tne WIBC | Hoosier barn dance sponsored by the I Maple Heights Home Economics Club. 6-2t.
FOR RENT: Brick house, six rooms, garage, chicken house, garden, furnace, electricity. Part of ( family to pick tomatoes. Eugene
15 head of good Here-j Bassett, Coatesville Phone. Ip d calves also heifers, — T —r. • . ,, ..I FOR RENT: 3 unfurnished rooms, live this summer. Also | •
Classified Ads
WARNING: As much as I have lost stock with tables, all strange dogs caught to my farm will be shot. Thomas J. Tuttle. 3-2p
Jered two year old bull, and 1 1-2 miles north O. E. Cox. 3-4-6-2p.
“E: Apples.
Buchheit 7-tf.
: Tu>> Guernsey heifers. E. Jones, IPhone 22F5 6-2;i
Two male Holstein ier Buis, 7 miles east on Ad. 6-2p.
No. one English Glen Clark, south of the
2-<t; -r.
semi-modem,
Jackson.
adults only.
211 No.
6-2p.
•LoSt-
Some have asked for evening classes in Typing and Shorthand. They have been scheduled at 7:00 and 8:00 o'clock respectably, to start Monday evening. March 6. Blanche M. Wean School of Business. Indiana and Poplar street. 3-3t.
LOST: A pair of two strand pearls. Return to the Banner office. 3-3t.
LOST: Dark blue and white stripped silk parasol in gymnasium at the basketball tournament. Partv who found it please contact me as it is valued as gift fiom son in the service. Mrs. Kiah Hovermale, Russellville, Ind. 6-lts
LOST: Pair of cream colored pigskin gloves. Somewhere between the
in
the White-Way . Reward, Phone B85.
6-lt
Cherry drop leaf
od bureau swivel mlr- j F°st Office and White-Way, or
-Real Lstaie-
jl brooder stove, antique almost new Heatrola closet, extra good farm draw, clover and timothy
fwnrk mule, sound '>ay j FOR SALE: A fifty aere farm 4 y cow with three calves , m iles from Greencastle! 35 acres tillh 6.00-16 tires, antique ^ a bie. Four room house and barn. pump, pump jack, farm j p r j ce $;j000.00. J. T. Christie, Real Hin stretchers, hand tools, j Estate. 6-6* >W, barbtd wire, oil stove, | , bods, copper boilers. . FOR SALE: A six room house 11s, lard presses, clocks. | near the First Ward School. Not y vats with heater, two j modern. Price $1500.00 cash. J. T. incubators, cherry bur- | Christie, Real Estate. 6-6t. W. Baldwin, Greencaa- . —~
g jp | FOR SALE: 16 1-2 acres, good
COMMUNITY SALE at Cloverdal ■ Tuesday. 150 head stock hogs: 10 bred sows; 20 head Hereford cattl’' Harold Smith, Farm Machinery Company, Cloverdale. 6-lt.
For upholstering, repairing and refinishing, and slip covers at reasonable prices. Call Art Furniture Shop, 9 West Franklin, Phone 299. 23-tf.
FOR SALE: Road rims for Farmall 20 or regular; Sorrell mare 4 years old, 1500 lbs. Flax mane and tail, well broke: saddle filly 2 years old, not broke. Sycaincre Top Breeding; three year old registered Percheron mare not broke. C. J. Ferrand. 6-lp.
FOR SALE: Guernsey cow, 7 years old, gives a goixi flow of milk. Elizah StClair, R. 4. fl-3p
FOR SALE: 7 goou shoats, about 100 lbs. one springer heifer Guernsey and Holstein. Al»o cheap set of work harness. Harry Gitz, Morton. 6-lp
FOR SALE: Mixed hay, mostly Clover. $20.00 per ten. V. V.' McCammack, New Maysville. 6-2p
ATTENTION FARMERS: Wo have our disc sharpening machine set up. Get your discs in now. Get all your repair work done early. Manford Graver, formerly Seobee Repair Shop. 24-tf
Be sure and be at the high school auditorium Thursday night. March 9. at 7 o’clock. If you can't make it at 7 be there at 9 and see WIBC Hoosier Barn Dance sponsored by the Maple Heights Home Economics Club. • 6-2t.
i house, garage, smoke house, 2 Broo.l-
E: Piano, good condition. er houses, hen house, barn, cellar. 2 t„ Fillmore. 6-7-9-10-4p i wells and a cistern. Harvey Pullen on
Clay and Putnam county line 8 miles
a-2p.
,LE: Good be.I, mattress; 80uth of Road 40
IS, also ladies light spring , once. Phone 647-WX. I
LE: Coal stove heatrola ium size. Phone 441-R or
Sycamore.
LE: 1937 Buick coach, upholstery, radio anil jm of smooth mouth mules, weighing 70 lbs. See anyr 4:00 p. m. Charles Sage. Je R. 3. 6-2t.
FOR SALE: 125 acre farm, 65 6-ip, acres tillable, balance in pasture j with never failing water. Good fenoj ing. Six room house, barn and other I buildings. 30 minute drive south of Greencastle. Write Box D, c/o Ban-
3-2p.
iLE: 1935 Ford tudor, exLora Buis. Cedar Crest 6-3p.
LE: 10 year old 1 Weight 1850. ilsville.
horse, Frank 6-2p.
LE: Rayon jersey twosize 14. Never worn. Phone 473-J. 6-lp. ILK: 12 white leghorn hens | rooster. $1.00 each. 403 Phone 290-M. 6-lp.
LE: Walking plow, single Frank McAlinden. 6-lp. LE: Baled oat and wheat jttle red clover seed on Naone mile east of 43. Paul 6-lp.
ALE: An especially good 8 Jern house with stoker and icated within one block of -ood arrangement for roomge family. Price reasonable, lyvrs. 6-3ts SALE: 1936 four door Chevan, four good tires. Ross Roelsville Route 1. 6-3p
Greencastle.
ner.
FOR SALE: Indianapolis, 3606 North Keystone Avenue. Five room modern home, insulated attic, storm windows and doors, full basement. Side drive to garage. $5500, five rooms of furniture if house Is sold. Phone 366-M or write Mrs. E. C. Dicks, 105 S. College Avenue.
-Miscellaneous-
NOTICE The following mail subscription rates are good until further newsprint rationing: The Daily Banner, $3.00; The Indianapolis News, $5.00; or both together, $7.00. GOOD ONLY where carrier or motor route service is not available. 26-*.f.
FOR SALE: TVam of black mares. 5 and 8 years old, good workers, plenty of size. 8 miles west and north of city. Ben Wells. 6-2p
Mrs. Edwin Hunter is spending n f*w days with his grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hunter. Mr. and Mm. Roy Williams of near Lebanon helped Russell Dinsmore ami family move to the MyrtlStorm home Monday where they will live for a few weeks until they g''t possession of formerly the Joe Garrett farm. Mr. Dinsmore sold his farm to the Charlie Sheets family who ar’ moving in. Mr. Harold Jackson was a dinne. guest of Mr. and Mrs. Oran Buis and daughter Saturday evening. Rev. Wm. McKeehan was a Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Grimes and family. Morris Woods and family are moving to the Laura Reed farm.
WANTED: Riders lu Allison Plant 3. Four to twelve shift. Call 581-W. 6-2t FOR RENT: 3 large modern upstairs furnished rooms, 511 S. Indiana. \ 6-lt.
H Woodring, who laft the Roosavelt cabinet in 1940. is promoting a “third party" movement or general conservative Democratic bolt of Mr. Roosevelt's candidacy, should he be renominated. To this end Woodring helped set up a "Jeffersonian Democratic” conference which met last month in Chicago. After conferences last week in New York ho indicated that the third party plan was solidly founded and that there were half a dozen or so Democrats who would bo availabK to contest the presidential election as u Jeffersonian Democrat.
Make New Pleas For Labor Draft
WASHINGTON, March 6 (UP) Two foremost congressional adve-
TO KEt I.ASSIFY FARMERS INDIANAPOLIS, March 6 (UP)' —Reclassification of farmers will be
i, 'cates of national service today made given priority over all other local i , „ , ,
th » a PP* a, « fo1 ' ,abnr legislation t>
combat increasing manpower short-
term for Mr Roosevelt is In anyway involved. Daniels goes back before the committee Wednesday to reply to questions he previously refused to answer. Secretary of Agriculture Claude. R. Wickard also will he called back to testify and he, too, probably will give Information this time that he previously refused. While politics and the fourth term were the apparent questions, the basic issue was whether the committee, duly authorized by Congress to undertake an investigation, could force Daniels or any member of the executive branch to give information he considered’ confidential and "not in the public interest" to disclose. THREE PERSONS KILLED BY ARMY LIEUTENANT
draft board procedures except the filling of induction calls, Indiana Selective Service Director Col. Robin-
son Hitchcock said today.
Hitchcock said that this procedure had been adopted to let farmers know as soon as possible exactly
ages and turnover threatening war production. Sen. Warren R. Austin, R., Vt and Rep. Claire Boothe Luce, R Conn., sponsors of different types of
what manpower would be available laboi diuft bills, declared in Intel
for 1944 farm production.
At the same time, the draft diree-
F0UND
views that the delay in adopting adequate manpower controls might
FOUND: Green silk scalf Ownet may have same by paying for ad. 6-lt.
tor asked local boards and county ] lengthen the war and raise the toll
USDA war boards to meet in joint < ol American lives.
Mr. and Mrs. Cliaijis McCullough enteitained with a dinner Sunday in honor of O'Dell Huk-man, I who
home on a furlough.
FILE MORTGAGE Exemptions. Notary Public, Deeds, Abstracts Elisabeth O’Neal, Cloverdale, Indi-
ana. Third house east of Methodist + EAST MARION TWI\ church—north side of street corner Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hunter and house. 6-3p. ! daughter entertained the following | guests Sunday with a pitch-in dinner,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hunter and son
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DON’T WAIT
1
Iliivo Your Living Hoorn Suite We-('overed Now While We Have Time and Material. It Will Cost You Onh $.’19.00, plus covering We have all the springs you need. We have several beautiful living room suites with springs. Art Furniture Shop 9 West Franklin nSJ5f5J3ISJ5JSi3JS®SOJ5I3I3IHISfSJSISlSJBiSIffl5it?
Charles, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stewart and son, Mr. and Mrs. Homer MeCammack and family and Mr. and Mrs. Byron Stanley and children. Honor guests were Charles Ray Hunter and Betty and Jane MoCammaek. Mrs. Chester Cunningham entertained the Judies Aid of the Bethel cluirch Thursday afternoon. Nina members and four children were present Mrs. Maude McNary called on Mrs. Elisha McAnnlch and Mi's. E. E. Buis Monday afternoon. Tjim, the little son of Mr. an 1
session and to recommend a minimum of war units for each county to be used by the draft boards as a guide in reclassifying farmers. The national minimum is 16, but Hitchcock said this number was subject tr revision upward. He said that all county minimum;* were expected to be set by March 13, and that review and reclassification of farmer cases could be quickly completed. STRATEGY UNDECIDED FOR ANTI-NEW DEAL FORCES WASHINGTON, March 6 tUD Anti-New Deal Democrats appear today unable to make up their minds on strategy to prevent President Roosevelt’s renomination for a fourth term. The belief that he will seek renomination is sufficiently indicated by the organization of pre-convention machinery to block him. But the program is developing along two different and almost opposing lines. Former Secretary of War Harry
PUBLIC SALE
-Wanted-
: Men to unload coal. >> cars on track. Coca-Cola company. 6-2ts
Good 6 month old coiCall 764, Orrs Tavern. 4-3p.
TO BUY: Used Nationregister. L. J. Fleming, 2541 )th St., Terre Haute. 3-3p. help wanted. Address Box 2-4t "ED: Farm hand, married or I No dairy but machinery exessential. Paul McKeehan. istle R. 1. • l-3-6-3p.
Any kind of dead 1 278, Greencaatie. Charges Wacfatal Co eod.
ED: Woman to work In Inquire at Rusty’s Pastry 6-3t
ED: I.Ady for house work of two children. Country laundry and week ends Banner Office. 6-lp
'uire
TED: Someone to do houseThree in family, no children. V Banner. 8-3p.
caning Family Wash M Curtains, Drapes, locking Blankets, Shirts. e Laundry and Clean«rs
Not Try Banner Want-Adi?
CLOSING OUT SALE As I have sold my farm ami decided to quit fanning I will sell at nn farm located in Jefferson Township, Putnam County, one half mile south of Mt. .Meridian, 7 miles northeast of Cloverdale, ami 12 miles southeast of Greencastle, on THURSDAY, MARCH 9,1944 The following Personal Property, starting at 10:80 A. M. 2 - HEAD HORSES - 2 One brown mare, 7 years old, weight approximately 1,750; one gray mare 9 years old, weight approximately 1,600. This is an extra good |»air mares, and work good any place. 2 - HEAD COWS - 2 One hrindle cow, calf just weaned, an exceptionally good cow; one Jersey C4>w due to freshen Marrh 17th, good milk and nutter
cow.
24 - HEAD HOGS - 24
4 sows. Big Type Poland China, bred to farrow Iasi of Marrh. These sown are coming two ynur olds, extra gosj previous litters 8 to 11; 20 head feeding sh(*ats weight 100 to 150 lbs. Some extra nice
Big Type Poland gilts among them, pure bred.
HAY AND GRAIN
Aonroximatelv 800 bushels good yellow corn, hand picked to be sold by the bushel, either weighed or measured to suit purchaser; 4 to -> tons good mixed clover and timothy hay put up without mill: *5 to 80 bushels g«.Kl oats. One to 40 bushels Big English d—
seed.
POULTRY
KM) vearling and pullets laying about 50 per-cent, about half Barred Hocks aad one half White Bocks, very nice
chickens.
HARNESS
Two sets tub harness, one used some and one purchased new this winter. Hussett tan an extra good set of harness. Also some leather collars, pads and some harness |»rts. HOG HOUSES AND FOUNTAINS 8 hog houses and three harrell hog fountains.
FARM TOOLS
One new J. L Case low steel wheel wagon with hay frame and r" lb X Deere !L 'A X h0rHe E? 'oracHeallv new^John l)eere with fertilizer attachment; ‘ t^aem duTharnm wiTh horse and tractor hitch; 1 McCormick XriXXvS£ machine, 2 walking breaking plows, i cultlpacker; Deering mo K ^ fo<|t H| , )ke ^k.ih harrow, one wheat drill UertilJr^aXe extra good double trees; one two wheel trail-
er with stock rack.
MISCELLANEOUS EQUIPMENT ,, , .. . „,„ vpn uire stretchers, hand stretehers and rope XrXt Xierr»P«X shovels. Brace and bits, hand^saw^and SZy Xer pieces of equipment used on a farm. One Simplex Jack. ,
TERMS—CASH.
ELMER BLUE, Owner
smjSri-ijrruo-arisiji'ss
etover
«
one
healthy
I will sell at public auction at the Wltmer Albhi farm, better known as the ( hnrles Hutcheson farm. 6 miles southwest of tireencAtle, S'j miles northwest of Manhattan, on Friday, March 10,1944 At It O’clock a. M. 5 HORSES—I dark roan mare, 10 years okl, In Coat; 1 ba> mare. 7 years ole; I dark Chestnut mare, 8 years okl; l hay filly, 2 years old; I gray mare 8 years old. - | 6 Hot.^—8 open Chester White sows; 2 Hampshire sows to farrow 'lay 6; 1 Chester WlMtc sow, will farrow before* sale. FARM IMPLEMENTS—One 10-20 International tractor. I two bottom 14" tractor plow, one 7 ft. double discs good condition, I rotary hoe, I good MeCormlck-Deering mowing machine, runs In oil, one 14’’ Oliver plow, bay rake. In good eondilioii one 7 ft. tandem, one iron wheel wagon with flai top bed, two one row eultlvators, one* forge and anvil, one |x>»i drill, one feed grialei', good hog box, one set chain liarness, two good collars, 23” and 28”, one set bridles, uses! one season, 150 feet of hay ro|te. 81 CHICKENS—IS White- Rock hens; 88 Leghorn hens. MISfKI.LANKOI M HOUSEHOLD ITEMS—1 coal brooder stove and pipe, 5(H) ohic-k size-, 1 five gallon galvanized fountain; 1 three gallon galvnuized fountain; 10 large galvanized feeders; 10 small gal\uni/.ed feeders; I telephone; I iron lied, springs and mattress; I dresser; I No. 58 Florence heating stove; I Wilson woa.l heater I hand corn shelter; 1 South Bend range; I heating stove; 1 oil stove; household goods; many tools. One DcLaval cream scimrator and numerous other articles. TERMS—CASH.
Austin, co-author of the Austin Wadsworth bill for full-pledged na tional service, said his proposa would be no stricter than many vnl untary programs are in theory am that it was in line with the Baruch recommendations for orderly demobilization. He rejected charges that the bill would force civilians into in
dust rial “slavery.”
“If this be slavery." he said, “le: the boys at the front come home c
j enjoy it.”
Unlike the Austin-Wadsworth bill Which would make liable for servic all men aged 18-65 and women fron 18-50, Mis. Luce's bill would draf into army and navy "labor corps' only the number of male registrant 4-F's would be first required t.< fill labor needs us they arise. Worn en would not be involved, she said, because im attempt to regiment women for war work probably would be an “adventure in futility.’’
TEST CASE LOOMS OVER SENATE INVESTIGATION WASHINGTON, Mar h tk— (UP) White House capitulation to th--Senate Committee InvesY.galmg the Kural Electrification Administration left unanswered today a question of highest legal importance whethei a congressional committee can force ''confidential" information from 1 c member of the executive branch. A test case appealed in the makiu,; when the committee threatened contempt proceedings against Jonathai Daniels, a White House aide, for re fusing t-i discuss his purported efforts to oust Hairy Slattery, RF.A head. The showdown was sidetracked, temporarily at least, when President Rocsevelt directed Daniels over th ■ weekend to provide the information sought. The committee, told by Slattery that political motives ippeared behind the effoits to get him out of REA, wants to determine if a fourth
W. B. VAUGHT
ALTON HURST. Auctioneer. Lunch will he served.
CUFF UeMAINH, (lerk. Neighbors weleowe to sell at Oil-, sale.
ALTON HU ROT, Auct
PUBLIC SALE Because of no ground to farm this year we are selling on the A. B Hanks farm 2 1-2 miles south of Bainbridg’’ 7 1-2 miles north of Greencatle, 3 miles east Brick Chapel, on WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8 at 12 o’clock 30 - HOGS - 30 30 head of red shoats weighing 120 to 160 lbs; 4 red sow to farrow by date of sale. FARM IMPLEMENTS One John Deere Model A. Tractor, cultivators for same; one 14 inch two Ixittom John Deere plow good an new; 6 foot disc and tandem; cultlpacker, spike tooth harrow; Iron wheel wagon with flat top, Hides; set of leather tug harness; two 6 Inch Ford wheels and rims; one good 1989 Ford truck with 8.25 tires fish plates, auxiliary transmission, motor with only 2000 miles, stock rack and grain bed; three good hog houses and some tools. At the same time and place Hgfrvey Hressler will sell « one year old Roan bull. At the same time Arthur Ames will sell—25 bushels Dunfleld Soy beans recleaned; one hay fork; trip rope and 116 feet of hay rope; one Duroc boar pure bred, immuned and eligible to register—100 lbs. A the stame time Ross Bullerdick will sell—II Black faced ewes to lamb in March three years old; one pure bresl Shropshire buck three years uLL TERMS—CASH. A. B. HANKS & SON 4LTON HURST, A. O. HUNTER, Auots. BIDDIK LANE, Clerk.
RIVERSIDE, Cal March 6 (UP) —Chief of Police N. N. Brule reported today that a camp Anzn Army Lieutenant shot and killed three perso-ns, one of them a Riversic:-.- police officer, and wounded five others in suburban Arlington and at the army camp shortly before midnight last night. The officer, whom Brule could identify only as a Lt. Watson, was sul>sequently shot Ln the abdomen by C. F. Cole of the Riverside police and was taken to the camp Anza hospital. Brulv identified one of the dead as A. B. Simpson, a Riverside police officer, and one of the injured as Ray Schlegel, Los Angeles, who was taken to the Riverside county hospital. Brule said that after shooting six people on th‘- army post. Watson came to Arlington, which borders the post, and was molesting Schlegel when officers Simpson and Cole approached to investigate. In the melee, he said, Watson shot Simpson and Sehlvgel, and Cole wounded Watson. Riverside county coroner Ben White was called to the army camp to aid in the investigation but was not available for comment.
TO MEET THIS EVENING I The War Production Training cln-ss in metalwork will meet this evening in the shops of the high school at 7:00 P. M. The class is especially designed for those who want to acquire skills in metal tool! and processes for industrial workers or farmers. The course includes are welding, acetylene welding, forging metal lathe, sheet metal, bench metal and machinery repair. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Hogs 8,000: active to mostly 20 cents higher on 160-330 lbs, 50 rents higher on 330-400 Dm, steady on 100160 lbs. 160-200 lbs $13 90-$14.10; 200-225 Us. $14.10-$14 20; top $14.25; 225-330 lbs $14.00 *14.05; 330-400 lbs $13.50; 100-160 lbs $10.75-$12.00. Sows $13.00- $13.25. Catle 2.000 calves 500; steers fully steady to 15 cents higher; cows firm; three loads 1100-lb good and choice steers $18 00, bulk $12.50-$14.35; bulk common to low g--od cows $9.00 $11.50, dinners ;md cutters $5 50-$S-.50. Vealery $16.50 top. Sheep 1,000; lambs steady Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Flint have returned home after spending thb week-end in Detroit, Michigan.
$10 FOR 25c No Gambling Involved If you were told that a twenty-five cent* investment would likely return you $10.00 or more, it would sound like a game of chance, wouldn't it *.’ Hut it isn’t. Here's Hu- proposition. Around your farm or home there are probably a number of usable items which you have discarded, yet they are needed by someone else who would |»y good money to get them. Well, for a mere 25c you ran insert a classified ad in the Daily Banner and likely well the tin-needed item in a week. War prothietion lias stup|M-d tin- mantifiiettin- ol many needed Items. For this reason, it Is essential that all utensils, tools, appliances, impieiiients and tile like Im- kept in a good state of repair and when mi-needed by the present owner they should 1msold or conveyed to another |M-rson Look around your farm home or luislin-ss—see if there are not M-veral things you eould dlspoae of at vn advantage to yourself and the piirehuser as well. Then try a 25e investment in The Daily Banner classified ails column. ADVERTISING lines not work miracles, lull it does render a useful nervier that profits both buyer *nd seller. The Daily Banner 94 Years of Community Service Paid Circuation Over 4,200
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