The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 December 1941 — Page 4
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1941
CHATEAU TONIGHT & TUESDAY BARGAIN MAT. TUESDAY
IN A DRAMA OF FUN ROMANCE AND COURAGE PARACHUTE BATTALION
with Buddy Paul EBSEN * KELLY Richard Robert CROMWELL • BARRAT
RKO RADIO Picture
AT YOUR DEALER'S NOW The Camel carton of 10 packages of 20's— also the novel Camel "house" containing 4 flat fifties. Both handsomely wrapped—ready to give. Either way, you give 200 Camels—America's favorite cigarette.
THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS CONTAINS 28% LESS NICOTINE than the average of the 4 other largest-selling cigarettes tested—less than any of them—according to independent scientific tests of the smoke itself!
Also: Donald Duck and News
CAMEL
-THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS
man armed raider was sunk by the 9,850 ton British cruiser Devonshire in the south Atlantic Nov. 22 after a futile attempt to escape behind a smoke screen, the admiralty announced today. No survivors were picked up because of the presence of a German submarine, the communique said. The German raider, intercepted by the British cruiser, caught fire after a 10-minute shelling by its eight 8inch guns, the admiralty said, and the crew abandoned ship. CONTEST ANSWERS Answers for the Loretta Young contest which ran for four days in the Banner last week are as follows: First day “The Doctor Takes a Wife," Kay Milland, Reginald Gardiner. Second day - “He Stayed for Breakfast,” Alan Marshal, Melvyn Douglas. Third day—“The Lady From Cheyenne,” Edward Arnold, Robert Preston. Fourth day “The Men in Her Life," John Shepperd, Conrad Veldt. “Men in Her Life” starring Loretta Young is now showing at the Voncastle.
County School
N
ews
ROACHDALE We celebrated Thanksgiving by gathering in the assembly on the morning of November 19 for the customary program. The following fifth grade students sang a Thanksgiving song: Howard Clark, Jeanne Wilson, Roberta Purcell, Loretta Newell and Tommy Anderson. A group of thirty high school girls sang “Come Ye Thankful People.” Rev. Ray Britton gave a very interesting talk, pointing out the original principles of Thanksgiving. The honor roll for the preceding month is as follows: Twelve B: Edwin Hatfield. Juanita Williams, Joyce Mason, Kathryn Duncan, Ruth Hooser, Virginia Davies, John L. Eggers, Lawrence Thompson, Rex Wendling, George Riggles.
Eleven B: Ellen Mitchell, Betty Hampton. Emily Lou Eads. Ten A: Gene Cloncs, B: Anna Ruth Clark. Marjorie Wilson, Margaret Edwards, Janice Wilson, Mary Stevens, Norris Rogers, Peggy Etcheson, Eleanor Bales. Bob Robertson. Nine B: Wilma Jones, Betty Wendling, Madonna Cloncs, James Baird, Nexa Bales, Mary K. Blaydes. Eight A: Patty Ryan. B: Paul Sutherlin. Robert Hutchins, Delores Hyten, Bobby Klein Reed Hennon. Seven—None. Six A: Dorothy Cloncs. B: Vivian Peffley, Betty Humphrey. Five B: Mary Lanham. John Wilson. Robert Jones, Elsie Rector, Aline Sowers, Jeanne Wilson, Phyllis Eggers, Roberta Purcell. Four A: Nancy Irwin, Joanne Crosby, Marcia Ann Smith. B: Kaye Wilson, Joseph Rady, Rebecca Mason, Katherin Acton, Betty June Eldridge. Guy Cloncs, Charles Byrd, Grave Holland, Barbara Dove. Three A: Junior Myers. B: Billy Pickel, Glenda Heal, Juanita Perkins.
Don Fredric Secrist. Second—A: Imogene Anderson. B: Doyne Cooper. Arlene Shuee, Raymond Wilson, Jeretha Douglas, Patricia Mitchell, Charles Rady. First B: Jane Irwin, James Cloncs, Judith Gough, Milna Farlan, Shiriey Bartholomew. James Robert Steele, Mary Louise Stewart.
Markets
INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Hogs 13,000, weights under 200 !bs steady, heavier weights 5-10c higher; 160-230 $10.05-$10.20; 2.'i0260 lbs $9.00-$10: 260-100 lbs $9.65$9.80; 100-160 lbs $9-$ 10.10; sows strong to 10c higher, good sows mostly $9.15-$9.50. Cattle 1,500: calves 600; market generally fully steady; 2 loads good to choice 1,000 lb yearlings $12.35; few loads steers $11.50-$12; medium to good heifers $10.50-$11; vealers steady, top $13.50. Sheep 1,100; native lambs steady
US
with best time Friday; good to choice native lambs $11.25-$11.50; common to medium $9-$11. FAR EAST CRISIS (Continued from Page One) Thanksgiving dinner, warned that next year they might be looking back upon this “peaceful” Thanksgiving celebration; that then it was always possible American forces “may actually be fighting for the defense of these American institutions of ours.” Congressional leaders generally urged a firm policy toward Japan. Although they plan a series of three day recesses for the rest of the year after defense labor legislation is passed— probably this week— Congress will remain on call in event an emergency arises. Sen. Elbert D. Thomas, D., Utah, a former missionary’s son and an expert on Far Eastern problems, still had “faith that a peaceful solution can be reached.” Sen. Frederick Van Nuys, D., Ind., a non-interventionist, conceded that the situation was critical but merely asked that the “public should be told what is happening before we go to war.” Sen. Walter F. George, D., Ga., former chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said: “If Japan moves into Thailand, presumably the English will take a countermeasure, and the decision for some United States move would then be matter of consideration.”
BULLETIN (Continued from Page One) 100 miles south of Moscow, while shock troops hostly [mostly] pursue fleeing German forces west of Rostov, Russian dispatches asserted today.
45-MILE CLIP—One of Navy's new patrol boats hits 45-mile clip off Cape May, N. J., where it is stationed with two minesweepers on Coast Guard duty. It has two torpedo tubes, machine guns and anti-aircraft equipment.
ALWAYS FAITHFUL — U. S. Marines recently observed their 166th birthday. In those years the Corps has earned the right to its motto, "Semper Fidelis—Always Faithful." Upper left, modern paratrooper Marine. Upper right, Marines of 1886, pictured in Portsmouth, N. H. Bottom, Lieut. Col. Huntington's Marines of 1898. He's seated (arrow) fifth from right. It's evident that mustaches and beards were still quite the thing. Note slouch hats.
CAIRO, Dec. 1 —(UP)—British Imperial forces are reducing German and infantry forces trapped in the Sidi Rezegh sector of the Libyan front while advanced patrols are attacking German and Italian supply columns along the Gulf of Sidra 250 miles west of the Egyptian frontier, a military spokesman said today. The Germans were fighting desperately in an attempt to escape the British tank and motorized forces in the Rezegh-Tobruk area, and the spokesman admitted that some of them might break through. VICHY, France, Dec. 1. (UP) — Marshal Henri Philippe Petain and Vice Pr.mier Jean Francois Darlan met a “high German personality” in occupied France this morning, it was announced officially today. The announcement said Petain and Darlan left Vichy by special train at 10 p. m. yesterday and met the personality, understood here to Reichsmarshal Wilhelm Goering, 11 a. m. today. The announcement LONDON, Dec. 1. —(UP)—A Ger-
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY Cleaning Specials — CASH & CARRY — Suits, Men’s or Ladies SKIRTS PANTS
These prices do not include moth proofing. At these prices you get first class Dry Cleaning.
IDEAL Cleaners
18 S. Vine St.
Phone 479
TANK TRAPPED- Here's how to stop a tank. Army engineers set a trap for it at Fort Ord, Cal., digging a ditch and piling soft earth at far side. When tank attempted to negotiate ditch, it stuck, as shown. Its effectiveness now is about zero.
