The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 October 1946 — Page 4
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1946.
CHATcaU LAST TIMES TONIGHTI
. Samuel Goldwyn present* I ^COiMAH %%%!•. with ANN HARDING IfoUDltr DIGGiS
| Mr.
I ami sons. Charles
Ida Evans Sunday. June Alden
WED, and THURS. You'll Like This! EDDIE DEAN In a Good Color Western "COLORADO SERENADE"
1 alie Evans of Indianapolis and Frl.-uii of Mr TamM, er, Bert Hamilton, Miss Hilda Knoll of Cloverdale. Sipple have received word from Nannie Fultz.
Mrs. George Ogle returned them stating they are visiting in home Saturday evening after a Tampa, Fla. The weather is fine week's visit in Muncie with and they are having a grand
George Ogle. Mrs. Ogle visited | time.
Thursday with Mrs. Marie Mor-| Mr an j M rs Virgil Smiley rison and Mrs. Florence Ken- have started working on their nedy, former residents of Clover-j new (lome whic h t h e y are build-
dale, who now live in Muncie. ! in „ south of town
tertained Rev. Russell of the Cloverdale Methodist church at
dinner Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Richard Clear-
Rimde'il waters and son visited with Mrs.
Clearwater's parents in Clay City Friday and Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Pleasant Heavin
and Mrs. daughter were also visitors. Mrs. PREDICTS INCREASE i Evans remains about the same. INDIANAPOLJS, Ind. Oct. lo I Mr. and Mrs. Oycie Mann and —Predicting a traffic accident
and Mrs. Forest Spangler ^ughter, Nancy, were week end increase due to winter weather.
Mr. and Mrs. John Logan, entered Indiana University for her junior year Tuesday, October
15th.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Staley,
Kyle and Mrs. Mary
were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ival Staley of Eminence. Other guests were
Mr and Mrs. Albert Staley, Mr. entertained Rev. Smith of IndiI and Mrs. Harold Kennedy and anapolis at dinner Sunday.
Mrs. Clara Jobe of IndianapI olis visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Brawn over the w'eek end. Mr. Brown is quite ill at his
home.
Miss Margaret Gardner of Indianapolis was a week end guest
CLOVERDALE NEWS Dorothy Jean Logan. John Mark Logan, Hilda Knoll and Bobby Logan attended the Ilii-n6is-Indiana football game in Bloomington Saturday. Saturday evening dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Logan and family were Mr. and Mrs. Ross Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hutchins and son, Miss Joan Evans of Brazil, Miss Ros-
j daughter and Mr. and Mrs. S. S.
Staley.
Cloverdale seniors went to Indianapolis Thursday to have
| their pictures taken.
Mrs. Etta Hughes, sister of Mrs. Kdna Knoll, arrived in
Greencastle Monday evening 0 f Miss Beryl Sandy,
from her home in Decatur, Ga. : Mr .and Mrs. Leon Sinclair Miss Beryl Sandy ami Dr. and who have been visiting Mrs. Mrs E M. Hurst were Thursday | Bertha Sinclair and Lois for evening dinner guests of Mr. andj about three months are returnMrs. L. E. Michael. i ing to their home in Pasadena.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ken- Calif., Tuesday,
nedy huve moved into their prop- Mrs. George Knoll is expecting
erty which they purchased re- her son, Wayland,
Henry and
guests of Mrs. Nannie Furr.
June Alden. were guests of Mrs. ( Mr and Mrs Vjrgil Hogers at _
tended the Illinois-Indiana foot- urged
Col. Austin R. Killian, superintendent of state police, today
motorists to prepare for
has just recently returned from | „ ame j n Bloomington Satur- seascival driving conditions. Guam. June Alden’s wife and 1 .... -— *»--
A Little of....
THIS
AND
THAT
By (J. B. Z.)
cently from Harold Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Estil Brown of Indianapolis and Miss Dorothy Pruitt were visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. James Routt and Wednesday evening.
home on a
furlough around the 19th. Arnold Sutherlin of Chanute Field, Rantoul, 111., and friend,
also of Chanute Field whose Sonny home is in tne state of 0re S on ' were week end visitors of Arn-
s
he used to pay *15 for a permanent-
Now she gives
herself a
wave at home Today, thousands of women are giving t hem solves Toni waves in ‘J to 3 hours at home. Easy, quirk, gentle even for baby-fine hair L‘se 7 - tor a
professionallooking, longlasting. lovely
t!
s|2r»
permanent!
" CHIME COLD WHVB ! i
+ NEW MAYSVILLF * Elmer Bracken, Marjorie Hardy, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene LePerre of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Steward of Bainbridge spent Sunday afternoon with Ida and Laura Steward. Mr and Mrs. Bill Wright of Washington. D. ■C., Dale Wright. Melvin Wright, Lrilu Bucking-* ham of Graiyl Haven, Michigan, were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Willie Ader.
Mrs Violet Leak spent Thursday with Emma Steward. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Davis and family of Indianapolis, Mr and Mrs Orville Thomas and family
Plans for a Museum collection by Gen. Jesse M. Lee Post 1550, Veterans of Foreign Wars, were
made public today by John of Greencastle^ spent Sunday Arthur Friend, chainnan of this with Mr and Mrs. John Mailcoat
committee. ,and
The Vets would like to secure I Mr and Mrs Earl S ® ots ' Mrt . as many pictures as possible of Betty Ross and son of North Puntam county men who lost .Salem, Mr and Mrs. Sanders their lives while in service dur- Hasten an^i daughter of near
War Clayton spent Sunday evening
‘with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Leak and
bf the Army, Navy and Marine Corps. Any souvenirs of any U.
6. War.
Each article will be labeled
. „ .. With the owner's name; from
old's mother. Mrs. Lucy Suther- what war and battl , and by
ing the Spanish-American
and World Wars I and II. Also
pictures of all the high officers, , ,, , 1 1 Ida and Laura Steward called
On Helen Weller Sunday aftei-
“Just ahead we face the most hazardous motoring months of the year,” he said, “and it is the responsibility of every person who drives to have his vehicle in
top working order.”
Cokmel Killian pointed out
that the state-wide accident experience may rise 40 pe.r cent due to rain, fog, sleet and snow. Shorter daylight hours and longer periods of darkness will in-
crease the hazard, he said. State police records shew that
the traffic accident total moves upward as driving conditions become worse. Dqring July, August end September last year 12,867 accidents were reported, as compared with 17,732 in the final
three months of the year. A total of 45,501 accidents
were reported in the nine-month period in 1945. Rural accidents were up 59 per cent and urban crashes had advanced 31 per
cent.
Colonel Killian charged car owners with individual responsibility for maintaining safe vehicles for winter driving. Lights, brakes, windshield wipers, tires and horns must be in working condition, if accidents are to be prevented, he said.
Q FARM NEWS
c °ND1Ti0r
last showing today
VA" of
lin and children. Sunday visitors
I whom. These articles will
Donald; j aced g.| ass cases under lock
Broadstreet. son of Mr. and Mrs.l^ key The re , icg win only be
Ann Biller of Connecticut
Muiiins Drug Store
— . |and ki Eugene BroadstreeE who receiv '| i oaned ed a broken ankle playing on the Cloverdale softball team o? eighth graders, were Billy and Donald Henson, Lester and Harley Sutherlin and Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Williams.
Mrs. Velda Nees entertained the Cloverdale Dine and Chat Club Wednesday, October 9th. Members present were Mrs. Dor othy Brown, Mrs. Dorothy Branneman. Mrs. Elvina Ray, Mrs. Rosetta Cummings, Mrs. Mabel Herbert, Mrs. Mildred Cummings and the hostess. Guests present were Mrs. Mary Frances Stringer and children. Contest winners were Mrs. Dorothy Brown, Mrs. Dorothy Branneman and Mrs. Mabel Herbert. Refreshments of popcorn, apples and lemonade
were served.
Donald Hamilton of Lafayette was a visitor Sunday of his fatb-
the
at
1 / Jon fjornery Ward f~^reienU
to the museum aii|d
donor may have them back
any time.
The Veterans' Committee believes there are oriany things of interest packea away that the public would enjoy seeing as a collection. These souvenirs would
CLOSING OUT SALE Having sold our farm we sell at public auction at the old Dr. Moser farm, S miles northeast of Cloverdale on Cloverdale and ML Meridian black lop mad or 4 miles south of ML Meridian .on WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, '46
AT 10:00 O'CLOCK SHARP 22 •• HEAD OF CATTLE - 22
One Polled Hereford cow, S years old milking good and rebred; one Guernsey cow, 5 years old, milking good and rebred; one Jersey cow, 8 years old to freshen before sale; one Shorthorn hull one
be of great interest to history | y,. ar g stock cows with nice calves by side; one Hereford cow
classes of all schools. The display would be a memorial to all who | served their country in time of) need and everyone should be glad | and proud to assist in getting such a collection assembled. Bring your souvenirs to the Greencastle Fire Department where Mr. Friend will list and label them an,l place them in cases, which will be secured as
the need increases.
Included in the items of interest are shells, guns, army
to freshen soon; one Shorthorn heifer, bred.
36 - HEAD OF HOGS - 36
I good Chester White sows; one good Chester White hoar; 31 Chester White shoats, weight 140 to 220 lbs.
34 - HEAD EWES - 34 34 nice breeding Ewes.
POULTRY
3 dozen Barresl Rock pullets, laying good; 20 White Leghorn pidlrt,s, laying good; 100 Austra White yearling hens, laying good; 5 young DurliM.
FEED
The deadly Japanese beetle is fighting a losing battle in Ind-
iana.
Seventeen, acres at Elkhart, and nine acres in Indianapolis
were sprayed by state en- ——w™ tomologists, to destroy any of the ! | Two things drew th?m ^ infectuous little beetles or larva | The memory of murii of these beetles, that mrgnt have I 8 Wlld emotion tha'fuJj 1 * lurked there. I hate' Frank Wallace, state en-j f fj
tomologist, rtf the Indiana Department rtf Conservation pointed out that at one time nearly; £. 200 acres had to be treated with jarsenated lead, in order to stamp out the beetles that Han established themselves here. However, by using traps to determine the location of these beetles, their number in Indiana has decreased
yearly.
These traps are set up over the state in connection with a pro- 1 ? gram of the Lhiited States De- ! partment of Agriculture, Bureau
of Entomology.
Mr. Wallace said that approxi-1 mately 500 pounds of arsenated j lead were used this year, and as' this mixture is washed into the soil, any larva there is immediately destroyed. The treatment is effective for a ten-year period, and at that time, new traps must be set out to determine if another treatment is
necessary.
Three members of the
tomology division carried uul - the program of soil treatment. ^.1 They were Paul Ulman, James Clark and John Favinger. U : According to Mr. Ulman who r has been, engaged in this type of ' I work for several years, soil treat- I ment was formerly necessary in eight other areas. Including districts near Hammond. Whiting, Soutli Bend, Terre Haute, Fort Wayne, Legansport, New Castle
and Richmond.
"With large shipments of servicemen’s belongings being returned to this coUndrv. we .must be d.oubly careflul that the treacherous little beetles do not gain a foothold here,” asserted
Mr. Ulman.
KM
NAl WHU?I
I'rtmti,,
(>1
[<f
enn.1 it
VjS
I# I
HI
i
Kirk Douj^ Judith Awn UiruNMfaail
WITH NEWS
WED, AND THURS,
AT THE VONCASTLE
I
P.'j; Mil Mil
15 am** of good Yellow corn to b« taken from pieker hy the bu. ! '* io hales of Alfalfa hay; HO hale* of mixed Clover and Timothy; |
buttons, medals, badges, pieces jjq hales of wheat straw; 4 ton,* of 2nd cutting loose Alfalfa hay;
- pSHT - aKf* i.
of unifarra,
metal, etc.
money, papers,
BOWLING (DePauw Gym) Tuesday 7:06—University A vs. Univer-
sity C
Wednesday 7:00—Coca Cola vs. Dobbs Thursday 6:30 —Eitel’s vs. Home Laundry 8:30—Midwest vs. University B
Friday
7:06-Johnson’s vs. V. F. W. Butler Eleven To Face Tigers
300 bundles of sheaf oats; 2* 2 bu. recleaned Big English Clover
seed.
FARM IMPLEMENTS
One K-12 Eannall tractor on steel, cultivator for same, 6 ft. disc and tandem, Little Genius 2 bottom 12 inch break plow, 5 fool McCormick mower, H ft. hinder, rubber tired wagon with flat top bed, 2 wheel trailer with 16 inch whesds and rack, S new hog hnus<nk, 4 hole hog feeder, mineral feeder, hog fountains, 4 new hog troughM, lot of chicken fountains, troughs, coops, 100 ft. poultry wire, buzz saw to mount on tractor, lo ft. sled, like new, one lot of small tools, wrenches, new diggers, spades, forks, chains, new grab fork anti rope, and many other articles, kettles, lard press sausage mill, water separator, milk cans, milk buckets, etc.
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE
3 gallon Burdsall white house paint. Dining room table with chairs, hook case and writing desk, one 6 piece Hickory living room .suite, suite of hed, springs, and new mattress; wash stand, dresser, 1
-mm . gts+n* , m
A w
tjm
*■ ;; : > -j 4
\ * J*
in
IkWt
F >. v .
K .
the new 1946 Christmas (Idooh We’ve just recived our allotment of this attractive gift book, so come in and ask for your complimentary copy at our Catalog Department. Then sit down at home and leisurely shop for every gift on your list. This new book is filled with scores of shopping suggestions . . . 192 pages of exciting selections, all at Wards moneysaying prices! And, best of all, you needn’t have the ready cash . . . once your credit is established at Wards, it is good anywhere in our store (your coupon books are good at our Catalog Department, too)!
DePauw University will be host to the Butler Dulldogs in a gridiron contest Saturday, Oct. 19, which marks a high spot in this year's Indiana Intercollegiate football competition. Game time at DcPauw’s Blackstock Stadium will be 2 p. m. | Saturday's contest will mark * the annual ‘‘Dads’ Day” cele-. 1 bration on the DePauw campus, when fathers of the students are entertained. It will also mark the resumpion of O.otball competi- 1 tion between, the two schools. DePauw an,d Butler lastjuct in 1942, when Butler defeated the Tigers 39 to 0. Butler dropped football during the war years, when DePauw was twice Indiana Collegiate title winner, and did not schedule a game with De-
Pauw last year,
DePauw’s starting line-up will be uncertain until the last minute and Coach Bob Nipper has revealed no plans for the contest. For the past two weeks the Tigers have used the T-formation in practice but as yet they have not used plays from the T in a
varsity contest.
white bed with wa*h Mtand, springs and mattress, one red Velour ' living room suite, one large upholstered rhair, kitchen cabinet, breakfast set of table and 4 chairs, new kitchen table coal and wood range, 4 burner oil stove, 2 hot blast heating stoves, one l wood stove, ice box ,one set dishes service for 8, extra nice; one lot I of other dishes, cooking utensils, drapes and curtains, bed clothes, j 2 men's winter coats, 2 large linoleum rugs like new, « extra nice 1 i 9x12 nigs, several throw rugs, new SHvertone battery radio with one long life battery, lawn mower, hand washer .like new with wringer, wash tub, and many other useful articles used in a good
home.
TERMS—CASH.
WITH NEWS SOl.ll) SERENADE GIGGKKS MV HIKE
• THURSDAY ENCORE N!GHT "The Fleets Ini ONE SH0HINT. BETWEEN THE RE*.I UU|
Mrs. Chark s Miller left for li liomr in North GiroliM IftlJ after visit::hrr ninth.r MlJ Cora Mason aiul family. - Mr. and Mrs. L. A. HaKlettj Appleton, New York, who been visiting the latttn m otl^ Mrs'. Corn Mason left 7uea for a motor trip inthe south-
Not responsible in case of accidents.
FRANK ALLEN, Owner
HURST AND HUNTER. Auctioneers.
GLUT Me MAINS and IRA V. KNOLL, Clerks.
Dinner will he served.
I Honey-haired Llzabeth Scott in Paramount’s sensational drama, ‘.The Strange Love of Martha Ivers,” at the Voncastle Theatre today. Miss Scott is costarred with Van Heflin and
Barbara Stanwyck.
GET YOUR CHRISTMAS BOOK AT
riIonfgmetu Kfouf
GREENCASTLE
DANCE AT THE Shades every Saturday Night. Hall Round, Half Square MUSIC BY BILL FORTNER AND HIS BAND. F. FRIZZ, Owner
Community Sale and CARNIVAL Saturday, October 19th. 10 A. M 10 P.M. Sponsored by North Salem Lions Club Six good dairy cows. T. B. and Bangs tested and vaccinated, real producers, sound and right; Hogs; Cattle; Poultry; Grain, Straw and Hay; Gates; Herders; Farm Implements; Fencing; Stoves; Incubators; Piano; Furniture; Dishes and Miscellaneous Articles. Bring consignment and register early day of sale. $50 and under, 8%; $51 and up 4%. Miscellaneous sale at 10 A. M. Livestock at I P. M. Col. Victor Carpenter, Auct. Ellis Freeland, Clerk. also / HAMBURGER FRY NOON AND EVENING 25 Free I'rlzcN. ( ash and Merchandbtc donated hy North Salem Mcrrhantw. Not reoponttlhle In eaae of accident*..
Illinois is using MO.OOO hjU seed corn detassolers iltn , i' ! S DDT will kill all three kin* flies common to livestock. A two per ' ent ■' 'l*'- 1 tax put into effect in W yratunj
I 1935.
+—
.
GIVE
AMERICA A CHANCE!
PRODUCTION...Not Shortage* &OX PERFORMANCES...Not Promises 5.ox FREEDOM...Not Regimentation COMMON SENSE...Not Confusion AMERICANISM...Not Communism VOTE REPUBLICAN! November 5 Paid Political Advertisement—Ind. B*P- State t * nl
* * - Ml*.
