The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 October 1942 — Page 4
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THE DAILY BANNED, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1942.
CHATEAU TONITE & TUESDAY Matinee Tuesday 2 P- M. If You’ve Seen It, See It Agraln If You Haven’t, Don’t MUs It! kTHE GREATEST OF ALL CAPRA HITS!
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A STATEMENT OF OUR POUCY
Fire Prevention Week This Is Fire Pre-vention-Week! and Not Just Another "Week”. It Proeloimo a I’ATKIOTK Dl'TY to Inspect Our Homes for Fire ll.i/arrls, and FMMINATE THEM: Kubbisli, Worn Wires, (’lojOfed Chimneys! Tills is a I’ro|>er Time ‘o Cheek Fire Polleies. roo. Iie|ilaeement ['osts are Souring. Have YOU Enough F1KE INWRANCE? SIMPSON H STONER Phone 6
GREENCASTLE PUPILS BRING IN “SCRAP” REPORTS
HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Noble Train and baby of Greencastle were released from the Putnam county hospital Saturday. Mrs. Harry Hatfield and baby of Bainbridge have returned to their home from the county hospital.
A high percentage of survey blanks which went out Friday for the purpose of locating valuable scrap material in Greencastle and Madison townships were today being returned to home loom teachers, by local grade and high school pupils. iPresident Roosevelt sends the following message from the White House: -The boys and girls of America can perform a great patriotic service for their country by helping oyr National Saivage effort. Millions of young Americans, turning their efforts to collecting all sorts of scrap metals, rubber, and rags, can help the tide in our everincreasing war effort. They will earn the gratitude of every one jf our fighting men by helping to get them the weapons they need - now. 1 know they will do their part.’’ Recently, Comanche county, Kansas, closed shop for a Junk Rally Day. You couldn't buy gasoline or anything else - except maybe a war bond. Farmers took the day off iu scour the county for scrap. Bankers, clerks, ministers, laborers all joined in. The result was 375 tons of scrap metal for the steel mills. This was in spite of 442 tons previously gathered. Most folks thought that left Comanche county pietty clean. The same county donated a carload of wheat to the famine-stricken Belgians back in '18.
are the most reliable sources of herd replacement animals. — SUB MISSING WASHINGTON, Oct. 5.—(UP) — The Navy announced today the 1526 ton submarine Grunion has been overdue in the Pacific for some time md “must be presumed to be lost.” Submarines of this class normally jarry a complement of 65 officers ind men. Ihis was the fifth U. S. submarine ,ost since the war began.
INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Hogs 13,000; generally 15c-25c lower; 160-400 lbs., mostly $15.25$15.40; top $15.45; 100-160 lbs., $13.85-$14.85; good and choice sows $14.65-$15 25. Cattle 1,800; calves 700; practically no choice offered; opening generally slow, about steady; medium and good steers $11.75-$14.50; few headers $12.50-$13.25; vealers steady 590, $15.50. Sheep 2.000; spring lams 25c lower; mostly $14 on good and choice; most good kinds.
McCurdy, when the church is re-con-structed after the war. This twicebombed institutional church was In itself a monument to twenty-five years of missionary service by Mr. McCurdy who died last December. The edifice has served the social and recreational needs as well as the religious life of thousands of people before it was bombed in 1939 and again in 1940 in Japanese raids. Chinese alumni of Northwestern University (Evanston, 111.), which was also Mr. McCurdy’s alma mater, are leading in the plans for this postwar memorial chapel.
TAKES THREE YEARS TO PRODUCE A COW
OPERA IN THEATER—Irving Berlin, whose Army show, "This Is the Army," takes to roed, presents key of vacated Broadway theater to socially prominent Mrs. Lytle Hull. She's president of New Opera Company, soon to start, first time opera is given in Broadway theater.
Replacements for the dairy heard is the biggest overhead cost of the dairy fanner, declares E. T. Wallace, Purdue University extension dairyman. Starting with the service it takes three years to produce a cow. This considerable time factor plus calf and heifer losses makes the problem of raising dairy heard replacements both expensive and complicated. A bright spot in the picture is the possibility dairy farmers have of lengthening the productive life of dairy cows, Wallace adds. Today, Indiana cows leave the heard on the average at six years of age, after only four lactations. There is no reason why a good cow needs to end her productive life so soon, he says. For example, "Violet” a 12 year old dairy cow, made $515.59 above feed costs in her first four lactations. In her next four lactations she made $546.25 which would have been lost had she been disposed of at the usual age of six. The cost of milk production is the same for a 12 year old cow as for a six year old, so there is no substitute for long-life production in cows. Daughters and sons of these animals
AWAITS FIRING SQUAD—Cuban judge in Havana reads death penalty to Heinz August tuning, right, convicted Nazi spy. tuning is to face firing squad. He sent information to Nazi tubmarine commanders* by radio concerning movements of Allied shipping. He's in Principe prison.
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY Cleaning Specials — CASH A CARRY — MEN’S Suits SQc Plain SKIRTS .. 25c pants 25c These prices do not Include moth proofing. At these prices you get first class Dry Cleaning. A deposit of 2c must be made on each outgoing hanger unless one Is brought in to replace It. IDEAL Cleaners
18 S. Vine 8t.
Phone 47*
WAR COMES TO CHILMEN—Grown-ups usually manage somthow for themselves, but wer it particularly hard on youngsters. These Russian children were left e. orphans when the Germans demolished their home end carried off their parents, during drive on Soviet-German front.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dean have received word that their daughter, Miss Olive Mac Dean is ill in Chicago.
m me WORLD fRCLIGIOO vlll.UI.RE ID
Mrs. .Ruth Mougey Worrell, of Columbus, Ohio, has been elected as the first executive secretary of the newly-formed United Council for Church Womert—said to be the largest organization of women in the world. Mrs. Worrell will move to New York in September and open an office at 156 Fifth Avenue. For a number of years she has been in charge of the women’s department of the Ohio Council of Churches, and has been well-known in church circles as a producer of large-scale pageants and plays at conventions; and as a leader in the former Woman’s Home Missionary Society of the Methodist church.
A fund of $50,000 (Chinese) is being raised in West China for the erection of a memorial chapel in the Methodist Memorial Church, Chungking, to the late Rev.’William Albert
WITH E HE IM 111,11' *11,E OK l>KKNh\\l. rROPEHTl III thf niiitf r of th*- EslMtr of M;irv Ann Horn, defensod, The First National Bunk, of Clnverdnle. Imllnna, Administrator No. s:i77. In the I’uOuim Circuit I’ourt, Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned AdinlnCstrntor of the estate of Mary Ann Horn, deceased, will offer for sale at public auction at the ltde residence of said decedent, in the town of Clnverdnle, Putnam County. Indiana, on the 4th day of November, '•'i- .. ..... ,, „ f m itii nVlo. k \ y on said day the personal property of Said estate of: Beds, dining table and X chairs, side board, small tables. Cedar Chest, rugs, pletures and frames, tniscl. chairs, silverware. clock. Heutrnla stove, lamps, heating stove. conk stove, kitchen cabinet and safe, kitchen utensils, fruit and cans, refrigerator, lawn mower, and other articles Terms: C.vsil. The First National Bank, of Clnvcrdale. Indiana. Administrator. rto.,,,, f. i,yoa Attorneys. r.-it.
VONCASTLE HURRY! LAST 2 DAYS
jL, THEY LOVED ^ TO LIVE..and lived to love! J%
“World Wide Communion Sunday’’ is to be celebrated in Protestant churches throughout the world on October 4. In the United States it is being sponsored by the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, and overseas by the World Council of Churches and national and denomination groups. In various communities through interdenominational cbmmittees, laymen are making a “house to house canvass” anil asking church members and nonmembers to sign cards agreeing to attend church service for six Sundays beginning Oct. 4. On that date itself it is believed that perhaps 15,000,000 Protestants will gather at the communion tables of their churches, some at union services. i
“Morals and morale blended together are the soul of our national life,” said Archbishop Francis J. Spellman of the Roman Catholic church, recently. “Religion and patriotism support and strengthen each other. Without religion and moral standards, patriotism is but a cloak. With religion and its moral standards patriotism has a foundation, a strength and a permanence which comes from God. America’s morale draws its strength not alone from natural courage but also from a just cause and from a just God.”
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m m Barbara 'George. v,‘ STANWYCK-BRENT *i
“If you approach any man and ask him what he thinks of Christian principles he will agree with them 100 per cent,” say Wallace C. Speers, New York businessman, and leader in the newly organized “Laymen’s Movement for a Christian World.” “But when he comes to applying them he falls down completely because there are not interpretations of those principles as they apply In | our complex world available to him. There is a distinct gap between principle and life which we must discover a technique for bridging. What better way can we do than by at-
with Nancy Donald COLEMAN CRISP
Immediate Delivery, No Waiting. WAR BONDS FOR SALE. | vum* tempting ,all of us, to make a Christian analysis of our everyday work . . . If a lawyer, doctor, merchant, politician will a raw up such an analysis for other doctors, lawyers, merchants, politicians to criticize constructively, each profession could develop a general type of practical interpretation of Christian principles
Rtf SKEim *«» IIUI
—Adfied— ; h|r& ^ “BATTLE OS \ MIDWAY’ ^ In Technicolor And Latwil News l'.\eiits. l ank* Win World Series U|n'ner!
that will be of inestimable value You will fiqd hiiklen [lossibiiu such a Christian yardstick will. you.”
If you’re a heartsick wifet mother—or sweetheart... you'd do a lot to give that boy a better chance to get back safe. Well then... do it!
SOMEONE'S LIFE IS IN YOUR HANDS!
IJOUND up your scrap metal—it’s needed to make steel. Steel for armor plate to protect him from bombs and bullets. Steel for weapons to help him do the job that must be done before he can come home again. You don’t want production figures. It’s enough to know that 50% of all new steel is made of scrap—that our steel mills now have only enough scrap in sight to last another 30 days
at the most! What happens after that depends on all of us. If production falls and you’ve not done your part, will you rest easy? Next week we’re starting a collection drive — to build the biggest stock* pile of scrap metal you’ve ever seen. Then when the mills need it, well have it—because you came through ... for his sake!
Watch this paptr for details of the big scrap drive and what you must do to h*lp NEWSPAPERS’ UNITED SCRAP METAL DRIVE This Space Contributed By THE DAILY BANNEsc
D?e l JI,^.,\™d B !I5I , fh7r^Tre , 80 n A r my a A k ir , |For # c. 7 j,'* four -. moto . red Consolidated B-24 Liberator, built at S*n end despite its huge site, It holds record for crossing 'ocaa'nln^OOmTnu^* * ° ne ° f Unde Sam ‘ ma '° r ^ ^
weapons
