The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 September 1943 — Page 3

I

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1943.

FOR RENT: Oarage. 308 north I College avenue. Phone 600-J. 2-3t. FOR RENT: Upper apartment unfurnished. Dr. J. F. Gillespie. 3-2p - Wanted-

WANTED: Laundry help. HOME LAUNDRY & CLEANERS. 28-tf

-For Sale-

[KOR SALE: Hampshire gilts, i in g farrow, thoroughbred. Priced Uonable. Ualhy Collings, Bainridge. 30 - 6 P'

[yOR SALE: Canning tomatoes, cuLibers, all sizes. Green Star ResLrant. Pleasant Garden. 1-tf [FOR SALE: 1 3-4 miles west of embridgc, 480 ft. light “T" rail leal for saw mill, wardrobe trunk ke new, irgina music box 12 records [edicine cabinets, kitchen shelves, Tgrtmcnt size electric washer, lhat-nots, barrel spray pump, 3-8 1] milk cans, ensilage fork, lead Ipf 3 buggy wheels, 1 lot old silver, lood novelties, heavy duty breast lill, feed scoops. T. (H. Hurt, R.

Unbridge.

WANTED: Cook, waitress gas boy. Green Star Restaurant. Pleas ant Garden. Phone Reelevillr. i-tf

Wanted to buy 5 room semimodern house in town or close ip William Abbot, Bainbridge, R. 1. 4-2p.

THE

WOMAN ON THE ' FARM Lucille Smith

Wilted Greens

First cousin to panned vegetables is the old-fashioned way of wilting garden lettuce and other greens. I To every 2 quarts of the greens, measure after they are looked over 1 and washed, allow one-fourth cup ' meat drippings, one-half cup vinegar, j ' and if desired a small onion chopped, j

mm WORLD r RCLIGIOn vUI.UI.ReiD

Mrs. Mary Williams Hemingway. |

WANTED: Fall paper hanging. Experienced. Make appointment r.ow Phone 726-MX. 4-2p

-Lost-

LOST: I Julies Gold Waltham watch closed case, at church on the Court House lawn Saturday night. Reward ut Banner Office. 2-3p t -Miscellaneous-

Remember our annual sale of purered Poland China hogs September 0. Noble Alice, Greencastle, R. 2. 3-2t.

^ , Girl 18 to 30 years old with know- ' Iwlge °f stenography and typewrit- ' i ing. Will train for private secretary.

hi on.

Lt Painbridge.

FOR SALE: 13 hole wheat drill Permanent P° sition to ri K ht P art yL fertilizer attachment, good con- 1 f d l dress F °- Box 165 ‘ Indianapolis, Ralph Clodfelter, IVj miles j Indlana ’ 31 ' 5t -

3-3p. Coon Chase at Portland Mills September 6, Labor Day, sponsored

OR SALE: Bean h*y. ready next by Conservation Department of Putk. Clar rxo HcsUt. mile west | nam Count j.4o Mortdh.J '*' ' S-2p.j

I am now available at any hour

[FOR SALE: 2 sows and 16 pigs, j during the day for accounting work narc! Lewis, Tennessee street. j—government reports, income tax

3-2p 'questions, or setting up or changing j accounting sets, to meet the present

IFOR SALE: Extra large January tax needs. Call 27 for appointments. Lek lamb. Cecil Knauer, ic. miles 1 Blanche M. Wean. Sat.-tf. Lt Brick Chapel. 3-2p. i

| J will have Alberta peaches Wed-

nesday at the Standard Filling Sta-

^■lOK SALE: White Rock. frys.

|tnry Williams. Airport road. 3-2p. ( Uon on north Jackson street. : [Paris. Bring containers. I FOR SALE: White Rock fries and j

(inch green beans, $1.50 a bushel.: ) delivery. Ed Stone, Airport road. I

Ross 4-3p.

—Found—

FOUND: Two small donkeys. 3*2p. I Owner may have same by paying for

Green Vegetables in Wartime Meals

Cook the onion in the fat until it Washington, D. C., for forty years 1 turns yellow. Add vineg-ar, and when j a missionary of the Congrogationalit is heated add greens. Cover and , Christian Church in China, is retiring j cook until wilted. Seaton with salt j frorrl acl i ve service. But her daughand pepper and serve hot. Or let cool I I er ’ -yi' 88 Winifred Hemingway, b: rr , and serve as a salad. I in China and speaking the language Soups And Salads j fluently, has been accepted as a mis-

I sionary to that same country. Miss

Vegetable Soup Pot. Why not | Hemjnffway a gladuate of oberUn

Information Bulletin BY GREENCASTLE COUNCIL of CLUBS

j to the headwaters of the Am**on, the Brazilian rubber country. | The Alaska salmon industry will i produce this year, It is estimated, i over 5.000.000 cases of packed aal- ! mon with a valuation more than pevj en times the amount paid Russia for , Alaska in 1867.

rr'"' b r M "m

apppear as vegetables wilt and wait. f i lr of lettuce . . . vegetable liquor ...

If you must hold them for a day , ,,

, J any leftover vegetables. If you have or so, keep green vegetables cool I . . r « „ , . , i a meat bone, add it for flavor. Cook damp, ancTTightly covered. Pile loose- .. . . „ . . , , . . , the soup slowly. Keep cool when not

ly to prevent crushing. , ,, ,. Wash quickly, never soak, and lift j lW y )" 6 '' „

.. ’ , , . ’ ' Vegetable Cream Soup — Heat 1 from water to free from sand and i , . ,, . .. quart of milk in a double boiler ° ' j Blend 2 tablespoons melted fat and To crisp up salad greens after i 2 tablespoons flour. Arid a little hot

washing, wrap in a clean cloth or put . mllk , stir until slT .ooth. and mix with "f

in a covered dish and let stand for | the milk in the double boiler. Add

a little while in a cold place.

in Shansi /Providence, China, is the daughter, granddaughter, and greatgranddaughter of Congregational missionaries, and her maternal great grandfather was the Rev. Stephen R. Riggs, a noted missionary to ths

Indians of the Dakotas.

Prof. Francis P. Jones, of Dodgeeville VVis., Methodist missionary and

teaspoons of salt and 2 cups finely

Save for the soup kettle leaves and chopped raw cabbage or spinach. Stir stems too coatse to use as is . (until thickened, cover, and cook

Start green vegetables cooking in j a . bout 10 mimlt es.

briskly boiling, lightly salted water, , U8ecooked veg(J , ablpS , to0i in just enough to prevent sticking , dellclous c , eanl soups Fol , ow the

to the pan, or with greens, only what i

same recipe only cook the milk

the University of Nankink. China an institution now "in exile” in Chengtu, West China, and Miss Stella Graves, of the faculty of Ginling College, who holds the degree of j

Reprinted from Science News Let-

ter Magazine.

Maple Syrup Yield Doubled When (■ raving Was Stopped

Maple syrup yield from a large grove in Ohio was doubled last spring, after the former practice of letting livestock graze under the trees had been discontinued for thre< years, Prof. Paul B. Sears, head ol the botany department at Oberlir. College, reports 1 science, July 23). I Three years ago, Miss Elaine Hoff I a graduate botany student at Oberlin, began her study on about 22. r acres of manl “bush," containing a total of $1,425 trees. During two years a general improvement of the

•woodsiness" of the area was noted

nore wildlife, and an increase in seedlings. There were some indicaions of inci eased sugar yield, but it was difficult to obtain precise data.

‘During the season just ended,

Master of Sacred Music from Union j however,” states Prof. Sears, “the

Theological Seminary, New York City, are the founders of the newlyorganized Chengtu Church Music

clings to the Icav'GS ■ . w w c.,,„ E ,„„ “r ‘rs cooking. Or use a pressure sauce- j Green vegetables, uncooked, mak. ] chojr directors and leaders of church

pan to shoitcn the time even more, (attractive salads served alone or ' n J muS j e

1425 trees which were protected from grazing produced an average of nearly one quait of syrup per tree against approximately one pint petree in the neighborhood which have remained pastured. Furthermore, the unpastured area produced a yielu

in Czechuan Province and is

cook ..itt.i vegeiauies only until com p any Chop or shred ve & e 4ables j workin for th(1 p rnmo y on of bette-j of 40 barrels of sap'after flow ^ had XLTZZZ-Zrx ZL iu “ “fr. T?* i * r-h I — -1 vZ,T JLJZ

down the sink. Use surplus juices in

soup, gravy, or

Toss

j church music, choir work, and for

Shredded cabbage with chopped j annual choir festivals. Dr. Jones has I Previous to protection, the sap flow

a veEctable cocktail ° ni0n and l ieanuts or wlth chl, PP l ' d or ! published a large number of Christ- j wa s no better than that of other pas-

K ‘ ■ grated raw carrot. j ian anthems, using western music I , e, k rri < n al> e 1 Cooked green beans and thinly ' and translating English and other s 1 Jlls i s '''' an< "l sliced raw or cooked canots. words into the Chinese. Miss Graves

make your ration for fat go further Raw Jch mth ^

be a miser with the oil In the salad'

dressing.

Plain Boiled

Best-known way to ccok green vegetables is to boil, but make it speedy. Cook with a lid on, in lightly salted water, only until tender. Use as little water as possible. Season with salt, pepper, and meat drip-

pings or other fat.

For a "different" flav9r, add ohop-

tomatoes or hard-cooked egg. Cooked peas and chopped onion. These salad suggestions also make delicious sandwich fillings. Cut fine and mix with salad dressing

creamed table

is furnishing

guidance.

the technical musical

tured groves in the area. The 1943 yield represents an increase in gross

income of $570 for the unpastured! smiling, ever-happy, because she

CATHOLIC INFORMATION Wanted a job—any kind of work— no limit to hours—no pay accepted. Who in the world would seek a job such as described above? Hundreds do tvery year! Hundreds of splendid, intelligent, educated young women some from our very finest families are applying for Just such jobs in the great Catholic Sisterhood. "The poor ye have always with you,” said our Lord; and if) God's scheme of things, Hv has called to the service of the beloved poor the very flower of womanhood. In this country alone there are more than 120.000 humble, holy women. joined by the common vow of poverty, chastity, obedience. Some of them teach in convent and parochial Tchools. Others care for impoverished old folks and orphans. Some nurse in hospitals, in homes for cancerous paupers, in leper colonies and 'midst shot and shell on th* battlefields. Still others go about begging at restaursunts, hotels and other places of leftover foods and scraps from pistes with which to feed the hungry, making their own meals from the remnants left by their charges. There is no work too difficult, boo menial, too revolting for these Angels on earth to gladly undertake for God through His poor, regardless race, color or creed. And they earn to money. They possess no earthly .hing not even the clothes they wear. Yet the Catholic Sister is ever-

is

Commenting on recent

j difficulties in Los Angeleg

or | vicinity Superintendent Vernon M. j fact that fat before spreading j McCombs, of the Methodist Lat'n

on slices of bread.

lir) -Clfuulag stag | Hat-Blockiag

f amily Wash curtains, Drapes, Blankets, Shirts.

Jome Laundry and Cleaners

: advehti&ment, feed and care. Orville arsle chives or herbs ust be

i Hutcheson, Reelsviile. 4-3p. i 1 . 0 p 1 ; fore serving.

IN MEMORY

, of A1 Sears, who passed away

•yegr ago, Sept. 5,. 1942.

j One year has passed since one

day,

one

IFOR SALE: 1936 Plymouth sedan,

lod tius, lecently reconditioned, j • v yj len one we i 0V( . d was called away,

|ra. Glen Kendall, 611 Crown street.

3-2p.

|F0R SALE: Shropshire rams. |oble Allet. Greencastle, U. 2. 3-2t.

I FOR SALE: - if son. Phone

Alfalfa 4F11.

hay. Eric 4-lp.

IFOR SALE: One 3 year old horse, four year old mare, extra nice; Meen 2 and 3 year old ewes. Zeiner, Fillmore. 4-lp.

God took him home, it was His will; Within our hearts he liveth still, Forgive us Lord, for asking why, But oh, why did he have to die?

Why was it he had to go For we all loved him so.

The blow was hard, the shock severe; God alone knows how we miss him

here.

Mrs. A1 Sears and children

|F< •!- SALK: 230 calves and light pi£ht ;i> lings direct from ■ebraskn will be sold by the pound h'l sorted to suit buyer. These cattle pre bought so they can be soldi jfth the Money. Wards Yards,

kwfoidfVJh.. t liul;'

Md lCi; 01 I IN VI "VKTTI.KMKVr

or KSTATE

NOTICE IS IIKIUlllV GIVEN to Hi <’reUltors, iloirs ;in*l l.cKatues of Mars | R. Prince, deceased t«> appear in ihc? Putnam Circuii fotirt. Meld at Green - castle, Indiana, on llu* -Ttli day o Sept.. 1»43. ami show * a use. if any Whs- the PINAL SLTTLPMKNT Ai roiWTS with the estate of said h. sedeiit should not be approved, am

, 1 said heii^ are notified to iimu n, i bCook slowly and stir constcintly until

*4-6t. 1 t htMe mak* proof of heir sh.p, a.‘ ! i»-

1 Asparagus

15-20 [

I Beans, snap

20-30 !

LBeans, pima

30

jBeet greens

10-15

1 Broccoli u.._

* 15-25

i Brussels sprouts

15-20

Cabbage, shredded

5-10 i

Cabbage, quartered —

10-15

Collards -

.4 — • *0

Dandelion gieens

10-2“ I

Okra

.'. 10-20

Peas

10-20

Spinach - -

5-10

Summer squash —

15

Turnip greens

10-20

<’reamed

Use a white sauce

For variety in

serving fresh ccoked vegetables or in

reheating left overs. To each 2 cups

of cooked vegetables, add 1 cup of the ;

sauce.

For a medium-thick

white sauce.

blend 2 tablespoons of

flour with 2

.tablespoon fat. Add 1

cup of milk,

American Conference in the south-

Cabbage Stew—Hot or C>»lcl i west . sa y 8 that no "pachuco' Cut cabbage in quarters, wash I 1 Prankster) has come among the throughly in cold water. Drain, shred,! thousands of boys and young men and set aside in a cold place until connected with the Mexican Procrisp. Pour hot salad dressing over I testant missions and churches on the the crisp cabbage; stir until well j Pacific coast. He urges all churches

in the area to widen their programs j I of education and recreation for I I youth so as to help develop charac- ) ter. "A fifth freedom is involved in * this situation the freedom of play,” [ says Dr. McCombs. "These boys need •quipment for play and competent

area. The area, rented for pasture, 1 would have brought in less than half j this amount. While this test may

Zoot-suit j no j bo conclusive, it is certainly sig-

and | n jfj can t particularly in view of the

one of the most serious of

economic waste in the North Central States is the grazing of woodlands and consequent destruction of undergrowth, including seedlings.” (Science News Letter. August 14, 1943.'.

■nixed. Serve hot or cold.

RATION INC* AT A GLANCE

P'OR sauc; six nici White f«csd is thiec'yearn old bred for early log calves. Four miles northwest Bainbridge. Arthur Herod. 4-3p.

PUKE BRED STOCK SALE ISeptemb 9 i starting promptly at LOO, 5 miles southwest of Rockville, Id. fEPT. 9 1948 AT )2 . 00 i>|{oMI>T : head registered Hereford Cattle— head registered Chester White PKs con si; ting of 30 head of bred Ills some with pigs at side, 22 head ring gats and 10 boars. This is a |fil bunch of medium type hogs. Mte for catalogue. STILLMAN GOFF and LANDY CLODFELTER

■Real Estate-

I for

SALE: Nice nine room home in Greencastle, exphent location, large corner lot pOO.OO Elevgn room house, close t

i P us , *2800.00. Nine room house

Fillmore $2800.00 18 acres, edge Fillmore, no buildings, $1600.00

r 8 " several Putnam County farms | Untpr and Phillips, Fillmore. 3-2f l^'R SALE: A four room house

h an acre of ground. Ju»t out of Pe city on a concrete road. Smal f rn , chicken house, city water

['■ce $2000. J. T. Christie, Real r llaet 2-3t.

si SALE: An attractive five otn modern house in east section of J'y. Price $3500. J. T. Christie, Rea!

2-3t

celve their distributive slmres Diiu Hi'lm e, Admlnlstr '. or

WITNKSS. Ill" 1 Milk of suid Court,

this :10th day of Aug. 1943.

No. S3II.

Oiuer Akers, Cleik I’utmun fir-

cult Court.

K. 8. IlHmir.on, Ally. *-*•■ OKIIIA V\<'H loll V I’l’HOPIII vrill\ An ordlu.i MCI ,|.|>I "I'l iai ,ug innm > s for llu purpose of defraying the expenses of the Several departments of the town go v era men 1 ol the town of jlulnbridge. Indiana, 'or the fiscal year loM;iniiing January i. I'-itt. and ending I leccmber 31. 194 !. including all outstanding claims and ol.ligations, and fixing a time when the Same shall take effect. , , Section 1 lie it Ordnlned by tin Hoard of Town Trustees of the Town »f Ha in bridge. Indiana. I hat for the expenses of the town government and Is institutions, for the fiscal year tiding Deeemher 31. 194 4. the followng sums of money are hereby appropriated and ordered set apart out ot lPe funds herelt named and for the purposes herein speelfled. suhjeet to the laws governing " " «/''. ! nuns herein appropriated shall be held tnelud. all expend 11 ares authorized to he made during the year, unless t herwlse expressly stlpulnted and "Xeum. b 2 y ‘That for said fiscal year here is hereby appropriated out of he ‘'General Fund’ of said town, the

allowing: . ,

Onernl • ""d

12 Salary of Town < JoikIs’ItoJar/of Town »b.riijaV.

).T Compensation of town r Attorney ■ •;•••; 8#,u

17 Compensation of Mieti

: SKKvicKS t'ONTHACn HA,

ji Communication and

Transportation

‘*3 Printing and Advertising

25 services Other Contracttiral

2. r >l Examiners

1 SCPPLIKS

31 Office.aupplU-s

' cy and Sewer

CURFtKNT CHAHOLS

f,l Insurance and Bond Premiums

52 Renta *1,375.00

Thai for said fiscal yetir hereb. appropriated out of ... rund" Of said town (lie

< )fficlal

120.Of 240.00

250.00 25.00 75.00 50.00 50.00 275.00

SR.00 00.00

•For Rent-

i KF.NT: 7 room modern house country, small acreage. Call 409 1 Washington street Sunday an I

4 - i p

j F,, R RENT: Unfurnished 3 room

PROCKRTIKU

73 Equipment ••••••

Total General l'. 11M "

Section 3. there 1*

i he “Street

following^ H|| . st l y unA 1 SERVICES I’KRSONAL Wages of lAiiborers S

:i iirppijKS

25.00

"•hient. r,og south Indiana street. 1 attrsT: h °n” 661-m

son.oo

tooon

Aug. 25, 1943. Krnnk p ak er.

Plata I Minnlck.

■ Trustees.

^tmeoth. Salt to taste. Use the liquid rin which the vegetables has been rooked in place of part of the milk

if you like.

With Btead Crumbs Pour the creamed vegetable into a greased baking dish, top with bread crumbs, bake until lightly brown. For added food value and flavor, melt cheese in the white sauce or a Id sliced hard-cooked eggs. Panned Vegetables Panning is a quick and easy, top-of-the-stove way to cook many vegetables. It is a thrifty of food values, tco, for the vegetable is cooked and served in its own juices with just enough fat to season. Favorite for panning are cabbage, shredded in narrow stripes. . . Kale, stripped from the bough midribs. . . ..kra, with the pods sliced crosswise . very tender green beans, sliced

thin.

For each quart of the vegetable neasured after being prepared for cooking, allow 2 tablespoons of fat. Melt the fat in a heavy flat pan add the vegetable, and cover to hold in the steam. Cook the vegetable slowly until tender, but not mushy. Now and then give it a stir to keep it from sticking to the pan, and when ready to serve season with

salt and pepper.

Drippings from roast meat, fried sausage, salt pork, or bacon go especially well as the fat in panned vegetables. Or, If preferred, fry some salt pork cut in small pieces, or bacon sliced, use the fat in panning the vegetables, then add the crisp bits of meat just before serving. Vary the flavor of panned vegetables by adding a little chopped onion, or leftover bits of meat when the vegetable is almost tender. Milk, slightly thickened, is another good seasoning for some panned vegetables. Rift flour lightly over the

Office 12'.. South Jackson St. Hours 8:30 a. m. to 4:30 p. m. PROCESSED FOODS Blue stamps R. S. and T from Ration Book Two good from August 1 through September 20. MEATS, CHEESE, BUTTER. FATS, CANNED FISH AND CANNED MILK Red Stamps good as follow’s: Red stamps T, U, V, W, expired August 31. X good from August 22 through October 2. Y good from August 29 through October 2. z good from September 5 through October 2.

SUGAR

Stamp 14 good for 5 pounds from August 16 through November 1. Stamp 15 and 16 good for 5 lb each through October 31.

SHOES

Stamp 18 good for 1 pair of shoes, through October 31. GASOLINE Stamp 7 in the new “A” Book good through September 21st. Old style "B” ami “C” coupons not good after August 31. "B" and “C” stamps bearing words Mileage Ration” g od until used.

TIRE 3

Next inspections due as follows: “A’ book Holders by September 30. ‘‘B” book holders by October 31. “C” book holders by August 81. Commercial vehicled ever 6 months ,r 5.000 miles which ever is first. FUEL OIL Coupon No. 5 of trie present ration ■xpires September 30. First period coupons of new ration sheets good for 10 gallons beginning

July 1.

teadeiship for play, and the churches must furnish it. Our Mexican church at Watts, Cal., for example, has a full program of activities, but no outside playground. Yet Watts Parish with 22,000 Mexicans, is a major haunt of gangs. These two facts are closely related. '

The Indian Army, now serving alongside British and American unit, in Asia, for the first time in its history has a Chaplain's Department, 'rovisions has been made to ptovid< Indian Christian padres (pastors), for both India and overseas, "wherecver there are 120 Roman Catholic

Evergreen Needles Used For Scurvy 400 Years Ago

Vitamin C, the scurvy-preventer, j was recently found by Russian botanists to be present in ordinary pine needles. This discovery was hailed as significant and very properly so. because although the concentration in pine needles is not great, Russia iias simply unlimited quantities of

evergreen trees. f

However, although the discovery is new from a biochemical angle, from the viewpoint of practical medicine it is not. Without knowing anything about vitamins, American Indians 400 years ago knew how to cure scurvy wdth a tea made from

.ergreen needles.

Dr. Maurice Donnelly of the U. S. Soil Conservation Service research laboratory in Riverside. Calif., calls attention (Science Aug. 6) to a passage in Parkmans classic histotical work, Pioneers of Fiance in the New World, which tells cf the trouble of

the “Bride of Christ” and things His will is her will.

More than 120.000 nuns in this country alone! What a tremendous national asset! How much would it cost in money and results to replace them with paid workers, who could not, and would not labor with the same devotion and disinterestedness ? Beware of the story of the "escaped” nun. There can be no such thing. Any Sister may freely leave any convent at any time. Beware of hint who spreads such poisonous lies, for he is viciously striking at our country’s benefactors and at those who are very, very close to the Sacred

Heart of Jesus.

or Protestant Christians in any unit

.ormation, 01 station, on the recom- the Ii ' rench ex P lorer Jacques Cartier

mendatton f the head of the do-

JOHN ENGLISH WRITES LETTER FROM FAR AW AY AUSTRALIA Tha Daily Banner received a briet note in Saturdays mail from Pfc. John V. English, who said. "I an. now spending my second furlough overseas, here in the Heart of Syd.ney”. I have been accompanied by many friends in looking over the $100 bond from Secretary Morgen-

city.”

His address is Ffc. John V. English 35251107, Co. F. 126. Inf. A. P. O. 32 % Postmaster, San Francisco, Calif.

nomination in the area concerned. Where there are not enough Christians to justify the appointment of a chaplain, the National Christian Council of India will secure the service of some local church to minister

to the troops.

Word comes from England that Dr. Harold Moody, a Jamaican, for many years president of the League of Colored People, has been madv chairman of the London Missionary Society one of the great free church missionary societies of Great Britian, with missions and missionaries all over the world. To the League of Colored People, Dr. Moody writes: "I now go forward with your blessing and prayers. I represent you and pray Cod my occupancy of this position will do much to help to improve relationships between black and white and hasten the day when for all appointments, either of the church or the state, the question will not be ‘What Is his color?, but ‘What is his character and ability?”

and his party in Camla, just four centuries ago. Twenty-five of the men were dead of scurvy, and only three or four were still able to get about in anything like full vigor. Cartier, walking near the river, met an Indian, who had been as sick as the rest a short time before, but now appeared to he perfectly healthy. When questioned, the Indian told his White chief of making a drink of the leaves of a certain evergreen. The Frenchman tried it on his men, and in a week thej used up all the foliage of a large tree. Recovery of the party began immed iately. (Science News Lettei. Aug-

ust 21, 1943.)

o ot Glenn Michael.

3-2t. q. 9V , p clerk-Treasurer,

CLINTON FALLS Pvt. John Wm. Burk visited his parents. Mr. and Mrs, James Burk.

‘‘The demand for realism cuts both ways, ’ says Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick of New York. “On the one side it makes the Sermon on the Mount seem to some an idealistic fantasy, shown up by the hideous necessities of our era as naive, impossible idealism. But the demand for realism leads others in precisely the opposite direction. The Christian way of lif • impractical? —they think. Do we suggest then that what is going on in the world today is practical? This domestic regime of anti-Christianity would we call that economically practical, in terms of hope for thf kind of world our children will have to live in practical? Rather, this

Reprinted from Science News Letter Magazine.” "Do You Know?” A good milch goat will give 1,500 quarts of milk a year. The summer drought just ended hi Argentina is reported to have been one of the worst experienced in 50 years. (May 22. 1943 Issue). Puerto Rico, partly isolated by war conditions, has Increased its production of agricultural food products by 26 per cent over pre-war levels. More than a thousand acres of idle wasteland in New York State wen planted this year by 4-H club mem bers with over a million forest-tree

seedlings.

Federal and state officials arc making plans to increase oyster production as the present production is only one-half that of 50 years ago. Only female mosquitoes bile suck blood; the males get all their nourishment from plant sap. One American airline company finds that only one passenger in 1 000 suffers from air-sickness and

FERN 4-4"*F4"4'4--F*F4*4* + 4 ,, F*F Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sims and family of Stilesville spent Sunday with Ml and Mrs. Ross Furney. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Stites spent Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Heber. Mis. Ruth Landers of Warren, Q„ spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Donavan Heber and daughters Vivian Mae and Ruth Ann. Mrs. Ross Furney and Mrs. Francis Underwood spent Tuesday in Greencastle. Mrs. Layton Clifford and sons and Miss Virginia Clifford spent Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Mary Owens. Mr. and Mrs. Donavan Heber and daughters spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Alva Gentry south of Reels-

viile.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burks and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Clines, Jr., spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Clines, Sr., at Cloverdale. Mrs. Sallie Varvel spent Monday with Mrs. Virgil Varvel. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Heber spent Sunday at Knightsville visiting Mrs. Heber’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Wallace. Mrs. Jake Goodman and daughter Nina and Mrs. Ernest Heber and granddaughter Vivian Mae Heber attended the shower at Mrs. Ivan 4 Ruark’s in honor of Mrs. John Canton wine. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Heber of Greencastle called on Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Heber Tuesday evening. Mrs. A. P. Stoner and Mrs. Robert Burks spent Thursday afternoon in Greencastle.

Sunday nig-ht August 29 was the

last shows of the season at Wiatts \vorld disaster, with all the voices of. only tne in 1,800 has ear trouble. Grove. 1 its need, cries out that unless we can | The United States is furnishing Miss Mary Ellen Spencer of Ind- ’ achieve the hard-head realism of the I funds and technicians to assist in the

cooked vegetable and mix well, add ianapolis spent the week end with Christian ethic and put it into 1 establishment of 30 hospitals

milk, and stir until thickened Sea- 1 her parents. Mt. and Mrs. Delton practice, we are personally son with salt and pepper I Spencer, socially sunk"

and

PUTNAM VTLUS Frances Brown spent Friday night and Saturday at the home of her parents, Mr. and [Mrs. Sam Brown. Miss Dora Haltom of Cloverdale spent the week end with Alberta Brown of Putnamville. Mrs. Louise Bridges has gone to see her husband P. IF. C. Alttson Bridges who is stationed at Chanute

Field, 111.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mace and Mr. Ernest Sellers were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Brown Sunday. At the time of the writting Mrs. Ora Williams remains the fame. Everett Hansel spent Tuesday in Indianapolis looking for a job. Mr. and Mrs. Hansel Mercer and daughter, Linda of Indianapolis and Viola Stevens of Detroit Mich, were week end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hansel and family. Mrs. Sam Brown is confined to her home due to illness. Mrs. Mary Renfro and baby and

am' ' health centers distributed from Mrs. Kelly Renfro spent Monday in

Guatemala through Central America Terre Haute