The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 November 1947 — Page 3
thf daily BANNER GREENCA5TLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, ’247.
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SAVINGS!
irm
CONSOLE COMBINATION RADIO PHONOGRAPH
^ ^ On Tirmi: $8 a Monlh a/ltr Down Poyml*
A beautiful pieee fif tuniiliire — a fine iii>trumenl! Stamlanl ami shortwave broa'I'a^l*! HeeorJ elianger tliat jilays twelve 10" "r 12" reeords automatically. Large 10" speaker! Walnut iicer c . Kxecllent lone with 1 ull* range tone control ami Ilasb Boost.
jTiger Cubs To Old Gold Opens Play At Home Season Dec. 2
Attiea’a KeU Ramblcrtt lent by Coach ‘•Rod” Lambert will invade tin' Greencastfe high school gymnasium Wednesday night to
With the opening of the basketball season only a week away, I Couch Hal Hickman is working his DePamv varsity hopefuls in
f * Hrif'
imported numdahs REG. 2.29-2x3' NOW Sufi white wool—h ml embroidered!
STANDARD MODEL M-W GAS RANGE I29 95 See this new gas range! Every extra iealurc means heller cooking for you!
395 1 1 liuiec of several pal* I ' '1 frame. *041^.
fULLY JOINTED BABY DOLL
She ibnuk* frotn tier ititr'mg hntllc, tin'll wets. Rubber head. Movable litiihs. I 1 ".
l| nLE traveler sewing kit 98 c Her sturdy suitcase brims over with every sew ing need. Reuldoll, material, dresses, ele.
HANDSOME WALNUT $37,88 WATERFALL DESK <) loomy drawers! Hardwood lion, lovely \ -luatchcd W.ilnul veneer..
BIG RUDOLPH STUFFED TOY
'Ai 2«
Soft, lifelike, tovabW Plush coal, red nose, rolling eyes! 17 inches tall! Very low priced!
m
EXTRA ROOMY CEDAR CHEST 411-in. long, solid Red Cedar lining! Stunning matched Walnut veneer..
WISTFUL TRU-SKIN BABY DOll 398
YOUTH’S RUGGED FOOTBALL 269 Durable pebble grain rubber coated hibrie. Extra lining. M'.e.i' official size, weight.
only 10% DOWN ON ANY PURCHASE OF $10 OR MORE, ON WARDS MONTHLY PAYMENT PLAN
battle the Tiger Cubs. It will be daily practice sessions. The team the first home basketball game faces a 20-game schedule whichj of ttv season for the local high will begin Dec. 2. with the possischool squad. ,bility that two open dates will. Smarting under two straight, be filled to make it 22 games
defeats at the hands of Terre this season.
Haute State High and th-j Following an initial cut in his| Bloomington Panthers, the Cubs 6f>-mon squad to 35 player v will try their best to turn in a!Coach Hickman tried out 20 ad-j victory fin the home fans in the ditional candidates following thj
Thanksgiving Kvo encounter.
Basketball
Tuesday
Reelsville at Ashboro Quincy at Cloverdule
Fillmore at Amo
Wednesday
Attiea at Greencastle
Russellville at New Market
Bninbridgc at Pit tsboro Roaehdale at Ladoga
ADOPT ADMISSIOIN PLAN
Soft lalef rubber body. Lovely plastic head. Anus ami b-gs jointed. Sleeping eyes.
BEGINNER’S ROLLER SKATES |98 Plain Waring all-steel wheel., undergear. Web straps hold toe and heel firmly.
end of the football season. Tiro | squad is again cut to 35, and ad-1 ditional men will he dropped during the next week, according
to Coach Hickman.
DcPauw opens its season on the home court Pee. 2 in a contest with Hanover College. Two i nights later the Tigers will en-l tertuin the Franklin quintet, and after another day's lay-off will travel to Bloomington to meet the Indiana University team, j Five major letter winners i from last year’s team form the nucleus about which Couch Hick- : man is building his varsity | squad, headed by Karl “Red”
At a meeting of the Urcencus- ,j arl | m , 1 . pjcvv Market, last tie High School Athletic Board.! Vl , ai .. s t . ( . ntel . nnt j high point •It was decided to adopt the plan , |lian the RroU p ids,, included that is being used by the othei hn Mote. Indianapolis; Dick team of the South Central Con- j Light, Indianapolis, Tom Beck, iferenee which is to charge one Connersville ;und Dan Guinnup,
| admission fee to each of our Seymour.
Ihnmc hnskotball games. That j
I fee will be fifty cents. FAYOIt FOX HUNT { Our own students, both ele- PKTKKSBURG, Ind., Nov. 21 mentary and high school,, will ( jns) Pike county farmera and have on opportunity to buy al pou |trymen were ready to spam j
sor a fox hunt tod ay, after, re-1 peatod depredations of their I
chicken flocks.
Two foxes were killed by farm* j
Women s WINTER
COATS
Reduced! Yes we have marked them to sell fast. WE NEED THE ROOM FOR CHRISTMAS
MERCHANDIS
S'
E.
{student thirty cent ticket at! 'their own school building on the
' day of the game.
‘ The Jr.-Sr. High student seals,>n tickets are two dollars. Tli" j Elementary tickets are one dol-
lar.
$15-$20-$25-$30 These are coats from our regular stock.
Self Trim •• Fur Trim. Fitted • Box • Boy - Styles Plains • Plaids • Wools.
Winter Hats $1.00 85 better Dresses $1.00 From $4.98 • $7.90 • $9.90 racks.
i
CAME Tl FSIDAY
The Bainbridge Independents will battle the Rockville Indepcnj dents in a semi-pro basketball tilt at the Bainbridge high school j gymnasium Tuesday evening at ] 7 o'clock. FOOTBALL St'ORES
its east of Petersburg in Mio last
few nights when the animals ^— .———■ ~ — — —■ ■ - —**^ were caught railding hen houses. ; Fikc county in smithcm Indiana j ^ v , , |k scheduled t > begin
Residents say the foxes are | was the source of 75 per cent <>l , , ' 60 ( , a ^
difficult to locate, because spoil »» the o.l produred in the state ^ ^ W1 , hm
banks in the strip mining fields Drilling for tin black stet f J ^
provide them with excellent
ha rbors.
mile of Petersburg, and includes land to the easi. and the south of the county seat. Oil op-
Drill For Oil In Pike County
now has been resume d on a larg. sente with a number of new wells beginning to produce in a new!
field six miles west of Peters-j , ' rntor; < ^ Pl k‘' < ’ ount y f
posits are an extension of tile Illinois oil fields. Most of the new
west
burg in the White river bottoms. Of ehc pas’ 10 wells drilled, none has be'cn a dry hoi ■
Notre Dame 50, Tulane tt Indiana 16, Purdue i t Cincinnati 26, Butler 19 Valparaiso 27, Niagara 7 Evansville 6. Upper Iowa
PETERSBURG, Ind. Nov. 24 - HNS) Black gold may again become an important economic factor in Pike county, Indiana. At one time, so oil men say,
leases are on the Pik • county si V ot White river, with liti'.e
Eight drilling rigs now .U"' at i , , • ,
! clasing being done in Knox eounwork in the territory and several j ( thousand acres of land have been leased by oil companies. Include.) in the newly leased land is the Pike county poor farm, which the ccviniy commissioners leased for
19IH MILK PRODUCTION 51 AY BF. LESS THAN IN
liM7
°h
HOUSEHOLD INSTITUTE Waterless Cookware It's So Easy! Have the amount of every grocery, produce, or meat purchase you make in any of our stores, punched on your cookware punch card. Each $5.00 in ''punches'' entitles you to buy any one of these top quality, thick cast aluminum utensils at our money-saving card price.
1 1 Covered Sauce Pan: For •■waterless” cooking smaller quantities fresh vegetable* and fruits. With <«r< Wlthnul Caul $|.S0 $3.18
9'f:-ln. Thicken Fryer: Cooks food tender. juicy: uniformly brown and done clear
through.
With < .'< Wlthnul Or.
4 - Qt. ’Covered Sauce^^^W Pan: For larger quantities fresh vegetable* and fruits, cooked “waterless.” wiih Cj.* Wllhi.ul C.rd sr” $4.98
3 - tjt Covered Sauce Pan: Cooks over low heat. Save* fuel, saves work — no stirring
necessary.
With « «r* Wlthnul Card
1*1”
$3.98
BE SURE YOU GET YOUR CARD TODAY
if") ' • : vrocjer
More than the usual amount of roughages and pastures should be used iu the dairy cow ration in 1948 because of the relatively high costs of feed grains, recommends F H. Demarco, Purdue University extension agricultural jecoiionnsl.i. in discussing the 1948
:dairy outlook.
j With high feed prices in pro* j spect for this fall and winter and j since whole milk prices are likeI ly to average about the same in tin first half of 1948 as in the first half of 1947, returns from (dairy enterprises during this perj iod probably will be about the seme or perhaps below returns I received in 1047. Dairy cow numbers have declined steadily since mid-1944, says the economist. The number of milk cows on farms in the United States declined two percent during the year ending in niid-1947, reaching the lowest level since early 1947. Milk production per cow during these years has been going upward, however, because of culling and liberal grain feeding. The high psice of grain and less favorable wholemilk huttorfat feed ratios likely will reduce grain feeding in 1048, though, so that production per (cow is expected to decrease during the coming year. Wholesale milk prices will increase seasonably until about tho jind of 1947. but are not expected t<> reach the peak of last year, according to Demarco. Prices will decline seasonably after the turn of the year and through the spring months, but a serious price break in tho first half of 1948
{is unlikely.
2 - Qt. t'ovrreil Sauc.. j Indications are that manufac!t "keeps" ’!oam U ami I, 1 "'* 1 . 1 ,uilk l ,, ict ' s wi “ hoW «P moisture inside; well in the spring of 1948 as in hastes food. too. ; sppjttg of 1947, with the poa-
'1"' 1 [sible exception of milk sold for
ii, r economist says.
NOTICE; Mr. Farmer we have a special price on Meat Sim ike and Sugar Cure for this week. Come in and get yours today. Colonial Hatcheries, Henry Baker Mgr. 24-4t. i Use Wayne 40'; hog sup1 plcment with your grain for fasj ter gains and off to market sooner. Come in and let us help solve your feeding problem. Free Do, livery on feeds. Your Wayne I dealer. Colonial Hatcheries, Henry Baker. Mgr. 24-4t
Huh l nl
$ 1.89
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