The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 October 1942 — Page 4
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DAILY BANNER, GREENUASTLE, INDIANA, RATERDAV, OCTOBER 24, 1942.
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I CHATEAU THEATRE I ^ MIDNITE SHOW SAT. 11:30 — SUN. - MON. - TUES. t 1 Here’s One You Must See Again, f? I FRANK CAPRA’S BEST PICTURE I J* with W I c i,\KK(;Aiiu:.( i. u iu:'m:(olhkkt I ^^iniAPPEMED ONE NIGHT" |
School Notes (By John A Cartwright. Jr.) Miss May. sponsorei of the Senior Class announced today the details of the Senior Play which is to he given November is She named Miss Charleen Seibol .as the director. The play to be given is Sky Hoad a comedy which takes place at an airport. Miss May said the following seniors would take roles in the forth coming com-
edy.
Dale Seyfried. Jimmy Bamberger. Betty Handy. Bob Knauer, Bud Monret, Gene Harlen, Judy Friend, Bill Lockwood. Betty Lee, Nelson Mars. Janies Reasoi Boslie Hutchenson. K1L n Fergeson. Eileen Mahoney. Jacquelin Monnet, Mary Louise Brown.
The officers chosen for the freshman Class are: Mary Ann BillsPresklent. Bob Wilde Vice President. Robert Kitzer Secretary. Mary Mosely Tr. asurer.
Mr. Pruitt's senior home room had a picnic at the Monon Springs, Wed. night. They met at the Springs at 6:::o. Thirty-one members of the A Capelin Choir went to Indianapolis Friday morning to sing at the Teachers Convention. Teachers gave the pupils a two day vacation while they attended the Annunl Teacher’s Convention at Indianapolis on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. CEMETERY HISTORY H nut iitiit’ri from I * n U <• One) Workman, a nurseryman of an eat 1 ier day. There is one interesting tree, a holly, planted in 1875, being
TESTIFIES — Elmer Davis, above, director of the Office of War Information, pictured as he tells Senate Committee that James C. Petrillo's ban on recordings by union musicians may hamper war in* formation program.
sent from Virginia. It is said to be | a Scotch species and is peculiar in that it bears no ber ries: its leavt s are not glossy and are smaller the r ] the usual species of holly. TLe remains of 376 soldier s an I sailors of the United States ate but ieu here many of them in ti:*? plot reserved for them surrounding the imposing Soldiers’ monument erected a few yeans after the cemetery was opened. A stroll through a portion of the beautiful grounds reveals many lovely forms of markers, which rang • in style from the very elaborately carved monument at the resting place of Charles Kiefer to the tall spire at the grave of Bishon Thomas Bowman. The latter sur mounts the high ground of the eastern part of the cemetery. Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes brought the remains of his wife here, and the monument at her grave provides for his burial also, when the days of his i useful, consecrated labor shall come j to til end. Dr. Alexander Martin, that dour Scotchman who was a presidt nt of DePauw, was interr d not far away, and there is also the resting place of Dr. Cyrus Nutt. D. I D.. 1 J. D„ member of the faculty of Indiana Asbury. I8.‘!7-1860, and president of In liana University. 1867 1875. Other Asbury-DePauw presidents rest near by. Dr. Joseph Addison Hill, founder of Uie Pythian Sisters and author of their ritual, is buried there. Particularly in the far-eastern area of tit ■ cemetery are graves of a number of former members of the faculty of Indiana Asbury-DePauw University. Edward Rector was bulled theio, close to Dr. Bowman. Some of tile monuments are carved from Scotch granite brought to this country as ballast for ships. Tie present cemetery board !nclud‘s Er nest Br owning, president Roy Abrams, secretary: John Rightsell. treasurer; Dr O. F. Overstreet. Edward C. Hamilton and George
Dong.
I'i DIE IN PLANE CRASH PALM SPRINGS Cal . Oct. 24 (UP) The American Air Line., plane which crashe I near here last evening, killing nine passengers and its crew of three, was in a collision with an army bomber air lines officials announed today. The dead included Ralph Rainger. author of such outstanding popular songs as "June in January.” Moanin' Low," and "Love in Bloom," B. R. Vest, Jr., an executive of the Allison Engine Co., of Indiana|x>Us, and M. C. Henderson, state industrial commissioner for Arizona. The big Douglas plane, east bound from Lars Angeles to New York, was coming in for a routine landing at the ah port here, it was seen to go into a flat spin at approximately 2.000 feet and whirl down over the north (idge of the San Jacinto Mountains. It struck the edge and exploded witn a roar audible over a wide area. It
WHAT MAKES A merry MUSICAL marvelous? jrtosiZl Star* and Fun I , Technicolor! Dance*! ^ Tunes! + Girl*!
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SUN. - MON. - TUES. — Bargain Matinee WHAT MAKES A GORGEOUS GIRL GRAND? m'SMTIT!
Red-Headedl Ravishing! Romantic! Riotous! RITA!
PU S I Dr»«i*r'» mod Color Cartoon & News 1
VOHCASUl
burned firecely for hours but the wreckage had cooled sufficiently early today to permit removal of
bodies.
Buying a Want Ad in The Daily Banner is like employing a saiet
force.
- > 11 ilSil 2 : In 1k
IN MEMORY In memoty of our beloved daughter Wynona Fitzsimmons who left us seven years ago today. An angel with a radianl face Above a child's bed, bent to look Seemed his own image there to trace As in the waters of a brook i “Dear child' Who me resembles so" i It whispered, come, oh come with | ! me Happy together let us go The earth is unworthy i>f thee. My Lord has need of these flower- j lets gay The Reaper said and smiled D ‘ar tokens of the earth are they Where he was once a child. Sadly missed by Father. Mother. Brothers and Sisters. HOI sEVt IN ES URGED TO < N\ APPLES THIS FALL With this year’s supply of com-
mercially canned fruit approximately one-third smaller, and shipped-')! fresh fruit supplies more limited. Indiana families must rely more upo* locally grown foods than in the past. To help conserve these supplies and to prevent food waste, Miss M. Anile Bushnell, county home demonstration agent, urges homemakers to can all apples not suitable for storage. Among those apple varieties which give an especially fine canned product are Delicious, Golden Deliciou. and Rome. Turley and Staymen ar • also good canning vat reties. The apples to be cannea may oe pared thinly, if desired, then cut into pieces Tlacing the fruit in a solution of two tahlespiKins of salt and two tablespoons of vinegar to a gallon ot water will prevent darkening of tat pieces until cooking is begun. Apples require relatively little sugar for canning. The addition of a
BUY WAR STAMPS AND BONDS AT THIS THEATRE
FINAL TODAY: “THE GREAT MAN’S LADY” with ■loel McCreii, Barbara Stanwyck and Brian Dnnlrvy. Phis Selected Shorts.
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I submit to the voters of Putnam County, my poll record as a legislator, as justification for my re-elec-tion to the office of Joint Senator from Putnam and Montgomery counties.
O. BRUCE LANE
YOI It VOTE WILE BE Al’PKEt I VII lb
Republican Ticket.
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precooking will help draw out th“ Both pints and quart jao s(
natural juice. The hot, precooked be processed for fifteen minutes inj
sauce should be packed into steriliz- boiling water bath. The waU 1 '
ed jais to one-half inch of the to|,. be one to two inches above Uw ^ then covered with boiling juice. It of the jars, and must be kept t '*l there is insufficient juice a thin, bon- ing vigorously iluiinp the ' nU 1
ing syrup of one part sugar to three processing time.
— TONIGHT THRU TUESDAY!
Hda Hayworth, as the hell, of the nineties, and Vi*tor Aruiaiirva favorite- lioaUtuor,in "Aly Gal Sul,” a icJm*' 1 " 1 '
