The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 May 1956 — Page 3

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THE DAILY FRr.. M W 11, 195€ Pape 3 GRfcFNCASTLE, INDIANA

Letter Received From Germany

Mr

Baumholder, Gormanj" 28 April, 1956. P.ariclen:

After

enjoying the accounts

in The I

>n ,e: of your Mexican

trip, I 11

night you might enjoy

a few r.o

on lay recent trip t >

England

nnl Scotland. I left

Baumh .1

der 10 April, arriving in

London ;

1 evening of 11 April.

After g-

Uing a room, I went to

see the j

day “Teahouse of the

Align -

M an" that night, and !

later or ?a\v three more, my favorite being • Pajama Game." The highlight of my time in London was 23 April when I went to the Royal Festival Hall. The London Philharmonic played Haydn’s •"Clock" Symphony, Beethoven’s "Emperor" Concerto, and climaxed the evening by playing pr-— hides to W agner’s "Lohengrin,” Tristan and Isolde" and "The Meistersingers of Nurnberg.’ The H »ii has been built since the 1 war, is ultramodern, and com- , parts favorably with our ?,ari ; j City Music Hall in New York I . \ i \ On the morning of 12, 13 and ! 14 April I went to Buckingham ! Palace to see the changing o;' i the guard, only to be told eae i j day that it was too rainy. Fin- !

I or Sunday, 15 April, for the first time since my arrival in London, the sun shone. So they chmged the guard. Perhaps the ! oli ones got tired. First came the band, from the east, playing a marching version of “Yellow Rose of Texas.” followed by the new guard. Amid the band playing and much barking of commands they changed the guards behind iron railings. The onetime one can get pictures is when they come out or go in. I also saw the changing of the Horse Guards at Whitechapel Palace, n -ar 10 Downing St. There or e can get into the palace yard, and guail is changed every day at II a. m., regardless. Perhaps horses are more faithful, and then when the guards ride they

don’t get their boots dirty. the Communists. The next day The inside of Parliament, with the papers had headlines with its melio** wood paneling an*i red the idea “time for constructive carpet and velvet gives the im-j talks; Lompusses shut up ” 1 press! >n of regally itself. Many wondered if they wish to limit

LOOK! A new kind of ice cream...

$

mi

Says Elsie, the Borden Cow. "Apple La Mode is an extraspecial creamy ice cream with chunks of apple right in it. Tastes just like apple pie am! ice cream! It's so different, so good! . . . youi! want to get the big half-gallon si/e. YouTl find it at the store where you see the Borden Ice Cream sign.”

' pte

IF IT'S BORDEN'S, IT'S GOJ TO BE GOOD! G1956, The Borden Company See Borden’s two TV shows, “The People’s Choice” (weekly) and “Date with Life’’ (daily) over NBC.

They 11 Do it Every Time

lt*9'«ter*d U 5 Pof«nt O^e*

v By Jimmy Hatio

IN U3RSECH5STEI? ) vV ' w vou my szsq > ^ T4*/THIS IS . CUT OF THE CITY LIMITS / THE T4XES 4f?E CNLV $40/

FhevVe been in tueir new MOUSE TWO MONTHS NOW- BUT THEY’RE STi’LL IN HORSECMESTER/

4ND HERE’S THE T4X BILL-

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3

Go THEY SOLD THEIR HOUSE IN THE CITY 4ND BOUGHT THIS ONE IN L0W-T4X M4NI4 M4NOR"" II ' KWG rF.ATl'BES SYNDICATE. Inc. WOULD KITMTS P.FFKRYFL

MICHIGAN TO OREGON LIKE THIS

^‘1 SB

W.

MR AND MRS. KENNETH KING ride away from Temperance. Mich., on horseback, bound for Pendleton, Ore., with belongings and dog Bruno. They’!! start a new life like the pioneers of old. King, a blacksmith, found tilings pretty slow, and since both he and his wife love horses, what better way to travel? Bruno seems to like the prospect, too. ^ (International SoundphotoJ

excellent paintings are hung there and in various palnces and castles. Nearby Westminster Abbey helps to aJ< to the traditional atmosphere. One bit is that only royalty of England can be married there. Since Prince Philip had no English title when h( married Queer. Elizabeth, they were married in the adjacent St Margaret’s Chapel, for commoners. The soft yellow nnd red in the London buildings are accented by the double-decker red buses; a ride on the upper deck along the Thames will be a long-remember-ed sight. During my stay Bulganin and Krushev veia making their bid for Britsh favor, tempting them with orders for industrial goods, and a sable stole to Princess Margaret, etc. One Sunday 3,000 Lithuanians held a funeral maren j in commemoration of the thous- j ands eliminated or imprisoned by

freedom of speech in Britain. The Russians were received and accepted much better than I’d expected. As to the funeral inarch if my home and belongings were stolen by the Communists and some of my family "cooled off” in Siberia I would be quick to

"forgive and forget.”

From 16-21 April I was in Scotland visiting herds of Shorthorn cattle and seeing the country. In Edinburgh is St. Giles Cathedral with its crown steeple; ie, the top is supported by four arched columns, starting at th« corners and tenninating in a

single pinnacle.

At the castles in Scotland the soldiers in their kilts add to the atmosphere. St. Nicholas church in Aberdeen welcomed me one evening with its 15 or so minutes of chimes playing hymns at 5 p. m.—a very pleasant way to end the day. Aberdeen is the hub of the Scottish beef industry.

RIOT OVER CYPRIOT HANGINGS

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HERE ARE SCENES in Athens as Greek students and others rioted over gallows sentences for two Greeks on Cyprus. Upper: An injured rioter Is carried by two comrades. Lower: Club-wielding police engage a street mob. Six persons were killed and some 200 injured, 59 of them police. (International Radioolmtos} ‘ALAS, POOR HOFFMAN. ’ f • ! ill m m

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mm

ms

P

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£& S it

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Calvin Hoffman and wife watch through bars around tomb as

-Tf :‘r'' '«**•*. . ; -Tt > t hi -

... Lord Mottistone peers under Walsingham tomb via periscope. ALAS, POOR CALVIN HOFFMAN, he thought he knew Christopher Marlowe well, but the above scenes fail to bear out Hoffman's contention that it was Marlowe who wrote the plays signed William Shakespeare. The tomb is that of Sir Thomas Walsingham, patron of Marlowe, in Chislehurst, England. Masons opened it and found no remains, no papers, Just sand and fragments of tile. But beneath the tomb is a coffin. It was not opened, and thus Hoffman’s experiment "dies, and makes no sign.” But the Long Island drama critic still thinks Marlowe’s his man, and will continue searching for proof. (International RadiophotoeJ

Mr. Fowler of Pittodrie farm*met me 19 April at Inverness, at my bus stop; then he took me to see the herd at Pittodrie, home of the Perth champions (equivalent to our International). Seeing their burly heads and excellent type, it was quite evident why Pittodrie Shorthorns have done so well. Mr. Fowler took me to see three other herds that afternoon, and Friday I saw another herd. Scottish hospitality was really wonderful. On my way back to London 21 April I had a three-hour stop in Edinburgh. Edinburgh had won their first annual football game in 50 years from Glasgow, 5.0 were really celebrating. My trip to Baumholder, via Oostende, Belgium, was uneventful. Now I’m getting eager to return, "Back Home Again Tn Indiana." I’m to be freed in July. At least. I’ll regain by personal freedoms, the rights of every U. S. citizen. Hope to see

you then.

Your friend, Charles E. Yeager. U.S. May Deport Russian Clerk WASHINGTON. May 11. (UP) —The State Department is conI sidering whether Vladimir P. Mikheev, a Russian Embassy clerk, should be kicked out of the country for trying to pry information from government

workers.

Chairman Francis E. Walter, D-Pa., of the House Committee on Un-American Activities, urged in a statement Thursday that the department “worthwith” declare Mikheev “persona non grata” unacceptable to the government and take away his diplomatic immunity. Waiter said Mikheev has "clearly violated his diplomatic status” by misrepresenting himself in seeking to get information from two government employes, ‘tV disclosure of which would ue to the detriment of our nation and its security." ONE DAY VAC ATION DETROIT, May 11—(UP)—A shutdown of all General Motors automotive assembly operations and layoffs by other auto firms today idled about a half-million

workers.

The sprawling CM organization said it would halt assemblies for today only, giving a “vacation” to more than 390,000 hourly —rated workers. A GM spokesman said this week’s production was cut to four days “to balance production with current customer demand.” Full production will be resumed Monday, he added. One-sixteenth of the area of Ngw Hampshire is covered with

water.

The mentally ill

Firm May Build U.S. Army Trucks

WASHINGTON. Sen. Horner (’ is confident th fltf S . will get part of a dollar contract f • awarde ; by the Ar future. The Hoosier Rt been urging the D<

UF

ment to m.ik* il "p«»

b e an .

Crcenrn ’ Tn l.

(Lee yourself

easy” for the firm > -

1 eoinr r . n ;

u!t limit an

fense orders. L u-

i>| !-f is'ilrr - ! , \ ; •

TRUSS. If

a reporter Thurs lay.

-.mr run' ire 1

out when

“very good.”

your tniw. iw off.

Ihiui you nisi

Capehart said he ha

0 , n 10 ■ 1

uearin .' • v r

e- kind of

out there is heavy m* nr

>loy 1

, ti !I\n. Sr- *. • AV 1

erni control

in the company and t’i 1'

gov, rn-

pi n. ft i ■ ? ■

Ms invention

ment contrat :s would

lp crea• * 1

for r ipture tn > m

L. Breients

jobs, particularly 1 !l

m Sou;

rupture fr >• 1 !

ni’'- l:irg<-r.

Bend, Iml., area.

Will root 1 h

1 se w hen

Company officials w< r

e in Now

bat hi in.. < , r i

of rupture

York this we is inv

iting Je-

tr.iutd qui I i\

possi - !l\

fense contracts and sd

k sal s

IIa-« NO Bll.is

and NO

in an attempt to case

their fi-

si it \bs f . bind.

w hlrh may

nancial plight.

ca.use niiruhn- < ot

!i ■ legs. It is

llifferi'llt f. ::i the

rilinary 1 \ pe

FOLH’EL SEEK KA BIST I\

i of tnisses \ 0:: fin

<1 els«-w here.

INDI WAPOI is

TOD \ V

You o\\e it to , nir

elf fo try the

INDIANAPOLIS, .\

lay 11

Hernia <iuanl. I'o;

miy t> pe of

Police sought a sex fiend todav

nipt, ire < r li -r.ca.

It \on desin*

who entered the liome of

a young

results uiii Ti \ n 1

\er thought

mother on a ruse, then

threal-

possible, f hen do

lot ov«rlook

ened to rape her.

this opporlii.iitx.

(' -rie in oil

Mrs. Marjorie Adi; ins, 28,

♦late Ik-Io-a . I n- -

< nsult vtion.

told authorities she dived from

No obligati in. 1'

>r\ n'presen-

a bedroom window Thur d iy to

tntive \\ i'l t> iri I

< miEiu 1-

elude the advances of

a knife-

AL HOTEL on

11 day. May

wielding man.

1ftth, 1:30 p.

’ p. in. Free

She said the intruder

knocked

demonstr.ition. s ( . (

. Powell.

on her door asking to

use th'

telephone because his <

tr had

stalled. Later, she said,

he ptill-

SATT

'lED*

ed a knife and ordered

her to

^ S A'hii to It.

0 you’ll b«

strip.

^ J / wh^-n f •

* in* you*

Mrs. Adkins said she

backed

~ worn . ji! j .

0 us fo*

up to a window a :d Raped out. She ran to a neighbor’s house. The niu-n, still holding the knife,

fled.

dOHN’S Si *01 Sniitn <

FARMERS SUPPLY,

103-107 Ensl Fra nidi 11

■be;

50 "f CHS MAY HAVe ONCY GOWNS AND fURS AND

and such

■Mt

III I

•V

BUT IT TAKES THM ut tlb SOMETHING

JusHhe righttouch...

(Did Hut

THE

E&

*.5 lofeic .• Co«i. I? 01 »«’u" ■ kbantz b*e

PUTNAM BEVERAGES, INC. Greencafctle, Inliana— BOB MK HALL. Pn -nh nt

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