The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 September 1954 — Page 3

Hit UAILY BANNER, GKttN'wAo I Lt, II , our i tULlv ^/, I y j4.

FARM HIM'* You can make liv“5t on merre water, your feed, by invr ngr thei t< tool, convenient drink. An all-w eather wat* ■ lar in M .-wmim u .

from a pond, but it will work wherever water flows by grav~ ity It r;in be adapted to a well, pi ing. or drainage tile. De-.^ned by Missouri agriculirai engineers, it is an earthen-

insulated concrete tank with a device that lets water circulate continuously in cold weather. One installation has not had a trace of ice at 5 degrees below’

zero.

OHIO STATE ROUTS INDIANA 28-0 —#r-

Incoming water is controlled by a float set level with the top of an outlet pipe at the drinking end of the tank. An inch below the top of the outlet is a 3, 8 inch trickle hole, which is plugged until the first hard

freeze.

When the hole is open, water trickles down the pipe and out a drain, away from the tank. The float opens to intake valve so that warmer water from the pond bubbles into the tank. A continuous trickle all wunter lowers the level of a hi acre pond 1 foot if no rain falls. Water from a pond should br filtered, according to Missouri ' engineers. They suggest a filter made from a steel drum filled with 'a to *4-inch gravel into which an upright 1-inch pipe is inserted. The pipe should be capped and have at least 16-quarter-inch holes along its sides, i The intake pipe to the waterer lies below the frost line, and j a shutoff valve is installed at the pond. In prolonged sub-zero weather. it may be necessary to drain the line and tank. To prevent damage from freezing, the inside wajls of the tank are sloped, and the exposed end faced with cinder block or insulation.

IN MEMORY

In loving memory of I^awrer.c' McCammack who passed away three years ago. Sept. 27, 1951 lust thoughts of sweet remembrance. Just love and sweet devotions, fust memories sad and true Of th*’ ones who think of you. Xot dead to us because we loved you. Yot lost, just gone before. You live with us in memory \»d will forever more. Wife. Ada McCammack and family. p. Praise for AFL

PENNEYS month end CLEANUP WHILE MDSE. LAST

HEW Y WEIGHT WASH CLOTHS DiSH CLOTHS

12 For $1.00

Yes. A Dollar A Dozen.

WARM

NAITY

I’l.AID

Veteran Ohio i" flu* Bucks roll < crowd of 72 7o." t \v: 11 kins and Indiana victory b

k H

(kins romps over from 11 yard line in a game which saw , o in Big Ten openei at Oh o Stadium in Colum.’nis. A p, , V e ■: coupled a tight defense with the brilliant playing of

idy, who eac h accounted for two

touchdowns, to throttle

At birth a black bear cub weighs from nine to 12 ounces, which is about 1 200 to 1 250 of its mother's weight. It is about eight inches long, blind, and covered with a dark hair so thin that it is practically naked.

BLANKETS SI .00

70 \ 80 Size — Stitched Ends

OI K ENTIRE STOt K OF BETTER I SHIRTS $1.88 Sh‘>rt Sleeves — They all go.

BEAI TIE! E PI.AIN s|l\m s CORDUROY 36 inches Wide, y i Hand Washable* *' ^ Pin Whale Quality < orduroy

MENS — WOMENS — BOYS — OIKES SHOES $5.00 ( lean i*|) of Betlrr Shoes.

BARGAIN TABLE A Eittle Bit Of l.vcrjlhing.

$1.00

s

IRISH SHUT OUT LONGHORNS 21-0

NOTICE

BOS WEI.L RADIO and TV SERVICE will he closed from TI'ESDAY, SEIT. >8 UNTIL TUESDAY, OCT. 12 FOR VACATION.

NELSON ROCKEFELLER, undersecretary of Health, Welfare and Education, praises the American Federation of Labor for its "major role in Improving the lot of the working men and women of America” as he addresses the AFL convention in Los Angeles. George Meany, AFT. president, said Rockefeller’s address "sounded like the talk of an able labor representative who is well versed in his subject.” (International)

WANTED: DEAD ANIMALS Seven D«iy Service Foi Prompt. Sanitary Service, Call Greencastle 278 JOHN WACHTEL, CORP. Call Cloverale 30 or Putnamville 33, Bainbridge 100. We pay ail phono charges. Koachdale 300.

‘Vintage Queen’

Fleet Notre I run fought contest w crowd of t two touchdowns . dehut a v id■ >i i< mis

i „ 's over for the first score in the second period of a hard K mu lush h in k ti’.e Texas Longhorns 21 to 0 before a sellout i'. I h. -n u k 1 by quartc. b ick Ralph GugWelmi wh,'> set up tl. thud . make 26-year-old head coach Terry Brennan's coaching

v-' in every mm! £ BUT WITHOUT COSTLY DIRT COLLECTING PIPES AND REGISTERS

{ JICULEIA * NEATMAKER No. 1

nun L -.

DM A tL 4

to put heat in every room in your home! PATENTS*

Convocation speaker Sunday. Oct. 10 when Indiana University dedicates the new Ernie Pyle Hall of Journalism will be J. R. Wiggins (above), managing editor .of the Washington D. C.. Post and chairman of the Committee on Freedom of Information, American Society of Newspaner Editors. Other events of that ded cation week-end will be dinner for jou nalism alumni, luncheon ,'vf Associated Press Managing Editors Aaicciation and series of seminars on news topics.

PIUS HEA7V4KER N* 2 W 1 .7 t J . i ’i the warn ..** r joi>! n atr i> pulkd dmuich d>r fifr S. . • j !

ORDINARY HEATERS cannot give you warm floor * / f treating because they waste heat up the chimney and * j /

iinglt It nef a tpact htott that wattat h*at up th» thimniy and am tha ceding, forcing you to liva la one at twa raama with cold Hoort. fioglor h not a tontral hooting giant with expensive Intlollaliontl SIEGLER is Hit revolutionary method of WJffA FLOOR HEATING puts heat in etery room •UT WITHOUT PIPES AND REGISTERS!

AND LOOK-don't let BTU Ratings confuse you! There b BTU INPUT ... tUrc L> ITU OUTPUT, but B»hat kcej>» your family v.arm U B 1 L L hi PL f . , . the v - i i. 11 i s i it r, CMgkr OLTHF. MS I M ALL! A 50,000 BTU SicgW gisrs more l SABI 1 H! M than mu, h higher rated ordi« ■arv beaters. An\ Sirg! r llrater you buy »*iU gi\e you *Biu<h more USABLL HEAT than any other heater of

Comparable sire.

r 0ieq£en. PATENTED J AUTOMATIC

GAS HOME HEATER

MONEY BACK GUARANTEE

A*)* t»w #eeie> let e NOT DIM0NS1 RATION—far tut afannar.ex »ni« S4<iLLt CiMrel i, HL

THE HEATTP WITH THE PATENTED

INNEt HEAT TUBES

pats roe it see with tns run it savis

FOOT RELIEF SUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK If within ( weeks wear yoii •re not completely satisfied YOUR MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED

1 . - - •’ ri ■■ A ■ • i " '/ > : ' - ■-

LOVELY Carol King uses a luscious bunch of grapes, a bottle of wine and a wine cellar entrance as props for role as 1954 "Vintage Q u e e n.” National Wine week is Oct. 9-16. Blond Carol is 22, from Mill Valley, Calif. (International)

It s Blackwood On Bridge Treat Dummy, Hand Like Separate, Allied Armies Looking ahead in the play lar ahead, sometimes is one of the marks of a great player. North dealer Neither side vulnerable North (Mr. Champion)

8

Q J A 9 8 3 \ K 10 9 4 3 First (Mrs. Keen) S - y 10 7 6 2 H - 6 4 D - (,> 10 C - Q J 6 5 South (Mr. Dale) S - A K 9 H - A K 9 8 7 5 I) - 7 6 4 C - 8 The bidding: North East 1 C Pass 3 C Pass 4 H Pass 5 D Pass Again.->t the slam contract in today’s deal Miss Brash qot off to a typically aggressive opening lead, the deuce of diamonds. Now Mr. Dale was the general of two armies in his own hand and the dummy. Any good geneia! knows that if his forces are split and isolated, disaster is likely to follow. Mr. Dale realized the importance of maintaining communication between the elements under his control. The opening lead was a good one (for the defenders) and could have caused Mr. Dale a lot of trouble. Suppose, for example, he had played as follows. Let him win the first trick with

dummy’s ace of diamonds. Now he has to ruff out a losing spade, so he could lead to his ace of spades, then trump the nine with dummy's jack of hearts. Cash The Queen? Next he could cash the queen of hearts. He couldn’t afford to overtake this with the ace or king because that would make Miss Brash's ten an eventual winner. Cash the ace and king of clubs, ihen, and lead a third dub.. Hi re. if Mr. Dale trumped low. Miss Brash would overtrump with th • ten and cash a diamond. If h trumped high, the ten of trumps would win a trick later. And. ot con; ,e, there was always a diamond loser. Ducks Diamond No good. Let's start ovc. Actually, Mr. Dale ducked the first diamond,, losing to the ten. The queen was returned and he won with dummy’s ace. He cashed the queen of hearts, led to the ace of spades and ruffed the nine of spades with dum-

my's last trump. Next he cashed the two top clubs and got rid of his last diamond. Now the way to his hand was easy. He simply ruffed a diamond and promptly picked up the outstanding trumps. Tims, by keeping his lines of communicatiim clear, he wrapped up twelve tricks.

CASH FOR FALL Get the Cash now to ' make seasiona! purchases. Serving Putnam < onnty People for Over Forty Years. inoianT

• 13 M. Washington. Phone 15

very wish of ihe family is considered and every effort is made to relieve them of worry. Funeral Home 222 E.Washington St. Phone815 GREENCASTLE Branches at Gosport and Cloverdcie

bsSKarat?:.

Par M«x mad Womtn. Sold Nationally Velva-Sole Arch Restorers are completely different mm any arch support' you have ever worn. No stiff leather, plastic, cork or s|eel. Suffering from arthritis, back or leg pains, bunions, cahniscs, or aching feet? then tr\ Velva-Sole. ONLY 86. The arch support making comfort history. \\ here others have failed, vvr havf succeeded. One of many Testimonials: “Thre« Cheers foi VelvaSole.'' No longer do the hard cement floors at work hurt my hack, cramp my legs or pain my feet. With my "VelvaSole-” my 250 (MMinds seem lighter than air. Many, many thanks. Sincerely. G. M. Fong Beach, Calif.

HOOS1UK

MOORE'S SHOE STORE WESTSIDE SQI ARE PHONE 988

6 AM TO 12 P.M.

REGULAR

EZRA CRAFT MGR.

HOOSlElf PETE

710 N. Jackson

Greencastle, Ind.

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