The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 February 1942 — Page 6

THE DAILY BANNER, flREENOASTlE. INDIANA

WEDNESDAY, EEBREARY 11, 1042.

CHATEAU

Defense Bonds Tonight TONIGHT & THURSDAY MV

dyu VViU, week en I and M!k. T

In i in;i;x>lis spent the | tlieir parents \tr. f B. VV'ilson. |

A BANNER REPORTER IN SINGAPORE

I

In Irons and Past Pa* .il i ipter exempliftRubert Morris ritual 1 ’1 overdale \V(*dne.s(tiy j

The Past : troas of the I (h! of the I of 1870 at

evening.

Miss Lois ng a’e sjaeat

1 parents Mr. j ey, Mrs. C. i Kennedy. Fr

| Stark ;U Moiton. M Ralph VVils<m spent VVtdni v vith Mrs. Lou Wilson and Mr md Mrs. Chas. Goff. Mrs X Foiuice of Rushville is vis ting h ter Mrs. S. F. Evans and family 1 Mrs. Stella Gaidner. Mrs E \\ Baker an i daughter Sunday with friends

McGaughey of Bloom:he wivk end with hef ill Mrs. R. McGaugnM. Inge, Mrs. Fran" ly with Mrs. Lott.it

Goff returned Slinks visit with her s\s-

W'atson at Gladstone,

Iver Bain. Mrs. Cora y with Mr. and Mrs. Danville. I Garden Club will C. M Inge Friday

A. M. Doyel spent rnoon in Greencast'.e. Donald Cooper an 1 relay with Mr and id at Brick Chapel. Mi 1 laughey, Mrs. Chas. \ Wilson sjient Friday ■ I Mrs. Raymond Harhi-

i id' Indianapolis spent I with Dr. and .Mrs. K.

d* d* *1* d* s' -r -V 1* ’I* d* d* d* v itrssEi.i.vn.t .E d fc d- •!• d + + + d r"'. Mrs. D. F Reed returned from a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Linebark and family at Tipton. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kerr and Ros-

K) >1 . DIRS <>\ \\HEELS

RANDOLPH. Vt. (UP) Firemen now r.mv li. ir own water to battle blaz. s :: •••rite I regions around here. The Ran lolph department now owns three tmcks, each of which riri 7<:i) gallons of water.

(9'jJXn (yurck^A-

VONiliSI Wednesday & Thu

Vour Newspaper by

Bett^Crocker Home Service Depart*****

ANOTHER RED CROSS DAY QUICKII Sharp January weather breeds hearty appetites. a problem f. r mother on those days that she give* »o gladly ('ri)ss work and any other cause that furthers our national (MeflM P “'^So" here's a suggestion for a hearty dinner ^at won^ raquira much more than half an hour last minute prepat^tiom. WhatB moire; ,1 . a (linmi that uses up the left-overs Another importaat poi»4 W> a national defense program is to avoid waste »n food. Monday Macaroni

Cole Slaw Bread and Bulter Pickles Steamed Left-Over Fruit Cake Coffee

Jam Cneamy Saaea

2 onions, chopped fine

2 tbsp. butter

l tbsp. olive oil (or cooking oil) 1 cup left-over meat, chopped

line

1 small can tomato sauce or

MONDAY MACARONI

tomato soup 2 tsp. parsley

Bit of bay leaf

1 cup left-over vegetable*

l cup meat stock

■/i lb. macaroni (l rapt)

Fry onion in butter and oil, and add the meat. Cook 5 minutas, add tomato and seasonings, and let simmer 15 minutes. Add tables and meat stock. Cook the macaroni until tender in 3 quarts boiling water, to which 1 tbsp. salt has been added. Add the macaroni to the cooked sauce. Serve with Italian style grated cbeeae. Thw makes 6 to 8 servings. ;

If You Have No Meat Stock

Meat stock may be made by dissolving 2 bouillon rubes ill 1 cup

boiling water.

STEAMING LEFT-OVER CAKE Fruit cake, or chocolate cake, or any uniced cak* that haa bacomc hard or dry may be steamed and served as a pudding. Place some of the cake on a plate in a steamer over boiling water. Tightly cover and steam about 25 minutes without removing cover. Serve hot with whipped cream or Creamy Sauc*. ,

CREAMY SAUCE

1 cup whipping tt-eMk

1 Up. vanilla , r

(

1 egg

3 tbsp. melted butter 1 cup confectioners* sugar

m

• i ■ • • • • <' i

FREE!

Motor and Safety Test

lO: mJ .Ar-

thurs. • FRIDAY FEB. 12 -13

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We want to let you know the facts about your particular car — as these facts pertain to its operation from the standpoint of

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COMPRESSION TEST

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IGNITION TEST

\ complete check on ear's “nervous system”.

your

STARTER CIRCUIT TEST

Thorough storage battery, eablr and start in”; motor tests.

GENERATOR CIRCUIT TEST

( lx k “Bower House" and wiring system—Includes checking voltage regulator.

COMBUSTION TEST Cheek carburetor to locate cause of low gas mileage.

SAFETY TEST

All these tests recorded on a special form at no cost to you.

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Hess .Sales * Service

7-9 East Franklin Street

Phone 11

Guard is reticent concerning lus own experiences. The exploits that have made him a w'idely known character among Uie fighting men of the Malay Peninsula are recounted by Stanley Jones, U. P. staff correspondent in the Singapore bureau, and other news men stationed there. Jones tells how Guard limped into the office after his most recent visit to the front, his mud-spattered tin hat askew. He was wearing a week's growth of beard ami hugging his battered portable typewriter. "Without bothering about a badly needed shave and bath or rest,’’ Jon'vs says, "Guard brushed aside all inquiries about himself and went to work, pounding out his eye-witness accounts of jungle fighting." After his dispatches had been filed. Guard did explain the missing seat of his trousers. They were worn out. he explained, from sliding into roadside ditches on the seat of his pants—his stiff leg held out like a flagpole—to escape Japanese bombers which attacked with distressing regularity. Other correspondents never seemed to know where or when Guard slept nights. He seemed to spend all his night time hours prowling, they said, and always turned up for breakfast with fresh stories. One such story concerned a visit with primitive jungle natives. These, Guard reported, are roaming tne Malayan underbrush in small guerrilla bands. On several occasions they Ijave pounced on Japanese spearheads and patrols, annihilating them. Another time he turned up a typical London Johnny—now a veteran jungle fighter -who until a few months ago knew nothing of tne jungles except what ho had read in a London library. Danger and adventure are not confined to the fighting front in Malaya. On January 19 Guard interrupted a United Press dispatch twice because of air raids on the

m the WORLD rRCLIGIOn

vUI.UI.RE ID

“It is human for our hearts to respond with anger against the ruthless acts which without warning have shattered peace," says Secretary Robert W. Searle of the Greater New York Federation of Churches. "But everyone of ous who pretends to speak in the name of Christ must submit his heart to the purgation of the Divine Spirit before he g ves public utterance, lest the word or tone of hate creeping into speech maek any of us treusable to the Christ Somehow or other we must do our utmost to stem a natural growth of hatred for the people of other nations whose leaders have made them our enemies Failure here means jeopardy of the future, and destroys in advance the opportunity of bringing to life from out this awful gestation the world we long to see. The birth of that new world is the main responsibility before us. While all others will become increasingly absorbed in the winning of a war, the church must augment 1 thousandfold its efforts for the winn ng of genuine peace and the creation of a new human order. To that task we must bring not only energy daring realism. We must face

but

the issues of it in our national well ns In our international life,”

V

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Li>. WiJ /

British naval base. After one Intel ruption Guard inserted parenthetic- !

ally:

“Just now my standard typewriter j jumped two inches from the table as a bomb fell nearby, causing a terrific explosion. I raced up four flights of stairs and arrived on tan roof just as the Japanese raiders ! disappeared high up in a cloud bank with British fighters close on their j tails. They were too high to deter- J mine whether the planes were ex changing machine gun fire, but the ! staccato fire of anti-aircraft guns |

resounded across the city."

Heat egg until foamy. Add melted butter slpwly, than the sugar. Add the cream whipped until stiff. Add flavoring. This is especially g .od with a . teamed chocolate cake or a steamed chocolate pudding.

< right l***! b, B-ttj Crorkfr. tpc. ■ -• -

If you have any specific cooking problems, send a latter requesting

information to Betty Crocker in care of this newspaper. You WlH raeelvs a prompt, personal reply. Please enclose 3 cent stamp t# cover postage.

; from Europe and from the British Islo-e American missionary workers are :crving as follows: in Japan. 82: ! m Korea, 29; in Japan-occupied Chi- | na. S62: in Indo-China, 56: in Thailand. 85; in British Malaya, 69; 'n j thi Netherlands East Indies, 59; in ' the Philippine Islands, 424; while 47 J are known to be on the high seas en i route to or from the United States. I In adition to this group, there are I more than 2,000 American Protestant I missionaries in various parts of Free

He described in another dispatch how on the trip to the front his press car became bogged down in anxle-deep rubber land mud. A cn:! ]

. • -1, , . , ,,, , , i China, .'iOO in Burma and several in

for aid, he reported, brought a I

. , , , , i various islands of Oceania.

prompt reply from several lithe, | turbarmed Indian soldiers. These j

bronze giants virtually carried the | Th" Foreign Missions Conference heavy car back to the hard road. ' °f North America, which coordinates chanting a native war song the ‘ ** le overseas mission activities of

while.’’

Guard stressed the fierceness of the native jungle tribes who are aiding the British defenders. Once, he said, he stopped near the left flank of the western defense line. "I chatted with one native who j was squatting in the brush lovingly I honing a nazor-shaip curved weap- 1 on," Guard wrote. "He gestured ri-( peatedly by drawing the blade across | his throat, indicating what he intended for any Japanese invader who crossed Ins path. The dense jungles I give shelter to many of his kind ana temper.” Guard's favorite story of his cut - rent war experiences concerns a time when he was drinking beer as one- i my planes appeared overhead and be- | gan a duel with anti-aircraft gun- j ners. Guard went on drinking his beer. Suddenly a large piece of shrapnel thudded down almost at his feet. Guard leaned down and picked it up. It was in the form of an almost perfect “V.”

all the major Christian tendencies of the United States and Canada, has a new executive secretary in the person of Miss Sue VVedell, who succeeds Miss Florence Tyler, retired. Miss Weddell is widely known as an author, teacher, and lecturer. She

—=

has been general secretary of the Woman's Board of Foreign Missions of the Reformed Church in America, and has had a wide experience as a missionary, and educational administrator. A graduate of Bucknell College, she was with the YWCA War Work Council and director of the Hostess House at Platts burg, N. Y. during the World War; and later with the National Board of YWCA. Since 1928 she has been with the Reformed Church in its missionary work, and was a delegate to the World Vonference In

Madras, India, in 1938.

Mindanao, the second largest island in the Philippine archipelago, is the chief home of the Moros who are followers of Mohammed and have generally been regarded as a warlike people. The Jesuits have had churches in Mindanao (Diocese of Zamboanga) for several centuries, and thousands of the people are Catho-

Wuhy* iQVO' *,

Pete Smith, Tr;i\ul Taltv |9

-1

lies. The American Boar; tionali»t.s) has had med.ca.i^B Davao ( the Japam .■ cen;« H 1904, and a hospita s;:ice '.-.H Protestant Episcopn the Day Adventist and Uie Chr Missionary Alliani del also serve on this island i| square miles. But Moham now 60 years on Mindaiuo principal religion of '.he pet;

BUYS U.\K ON 'O-IK. 1’ltH DETROIT LAKES, Minn ■ A man walked into • ifkc*® Munn and handed him a $1,000, final payment <m anil bile bought 20 year ago. .Hjfl plained he sold the car foritH and took a note of $1,000 'I chaser had kept up the mt-nl ments and extended the ’-I nually.

You can get spendid im;l Banner Classified Ads.

Three thousand representative Methodist laymen and ministers from the states of Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida are expected to attend a "Missionary Council" called to meet in the War Memorial Auditorium of Nashville from January 2 7to 30 to consider the homo and foreign missionary outlook of j the denomination and of the entire Christian church. In adition to a dozen bishops and other leaders of the Methodist church, these persons will be on the program: Dr. E. Stanley Jones, noted author and evangelist of India; Dr. George A. Buttrick. president of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ; Dr. A. L. Warnsuis, secretary of the International Missionary Council: Dr. Y. C. Yang. Chinese president of Soochow University, China; Dr. Ralph E. Diffendorfer, missionary leader; and Dr. Roy L. Smith, lecturer and author, of Chicago.

.-I

r. Farmer:

" v > . , _ - v _ ‘A

Do You Know Your Yearly

income?

.F-

There are 1,700 American Protestant missionaries still in service in the war areas of Asia despite the fact that several hundred have been withdrawn! from Japan, Formoea, Korea, and Manchuria during recent months, according to the Rev. J. J. Mickle, secretary of the Foreign Missions Conference of North America. This body represents practically all the evangelical denominations and missionary agencies in the United States ami Canada. In adidtion to these 1700 there are several hundred Prot“stant missionaries sent out

Could you raise your right hand in court and take an oath as to the exact amount you have taken in this past year from all sources on your farm? Before you place your notarized signature upon your income tax report for the government you should have information just as accurate as you would want if vou were going to testify to it before a judge. Figures less accurate than this may be a cause of embarrassmont when your report of your income is investigated and may make you liable to penalties under the law. Equally important i s an accurale knowledge of farm expenses, many of which may be deducted from your income, thus reducing

the amount of tax to be p id. Errors either in income or expei sc figures may be costly and a source of trouble.

Only the farmer who has kept thorough and accurate recor s can be certain of the figures he includes in his income report. "Agricultural Records", the easy farm record system, helps you provide every fact the government asks but is so simple that any school girl or boy can keep it. This amazing system is offered at a great saving in connection with your subscription to this paper by the plan outlined below.

Call at the office next time you are in town and let us explain "Agricultural Records" to you.

Total Regular Price $8.50

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Our

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Come In — Let’s Take a Look at the “Record”

THE DAILY BANNER

17-19 ^outh Jackson Street

iUH

i /

Phone 95