The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 February 1944 — Page 4
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1944.
CHATEAU - Tonite & Saturday
< H \I\ • "THK M VSKKI> MAllVKI/’ AM) A COMEDY
CHA EAU Midnite Show Saturday SUN. - MON. - TUESDAY
SPORTS NEWS
BOWLING
(By Jim Zeis)
BASKETBALL
Great Lakes To Oppose DePauw
BRICKER WOULD ABOLISH STRIKES DURING WAR TIME
OHIO oovkknor in i.im oi.x DAY ADDRESS AT 1!. S. CAIITAE WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. (UP) - Gov. John W. Bricker’s Lincoln Day speech proposal for absolute prohibition of war time strikes aroused top interest here today among ttu issues discussed by the Ohioan in his pre-convention campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. But Brickcr's bid for consideration in this political hot spot proved to be a combination of bitter denunciation of the Roosevelt administration and of significantly kind words for Congress. He pegged his appeal on domestic issues, but did propose that the United Slates “should take her place in a cooperative organization among sovereign nations after tins war.” His tactics were in contrast with those of Wendell L. Willkie, Bricker’s most active opponent, who occasionally undertakes to shake Congress by the ears, losing more tli in a few friends thereby. Bricker challenged “weakness >f the New Deal in handling labor ’elations" and said “a law should be enacted by this Congress laying down fundamental principles for tile administration and ail judical ion of labor disput' ; and the prohibition i>f strikes in time of war.’’ He said it was too late now to consider a national set vice act as proposed ! y Mr. Roosevelt Rep. Joseph W. Martin, R., Mass, introducing Bricker to the Mayflower hotel audience, said it was tie largest Republican gathering li <1 here in a dozen years. He predicted victory in this year's elections but said it would not be Republican ve - tory alone. “Victory will come,” he said, “because millions ol honest .since!*
QUALITY MEATS
$1 ooo bond to insure his presence in | federal court for what apparently is
j destined to be the most lurid crim-
patriotic Jeffersonian Democrats,^, tlla , in Hollywood history. will submerge pprty to the welfare, His troubles began when he rcfusof their country and because inde-' ed to make red . ha j re d Joan Barry pendent voters will unite with us. , w ,f e nunl b,.r four. She told her stoiy
I to the federal grand jury, with em-
DePauw's Tigers, fresh from ■ JW- iowi campus W Naviator V-5 m tls and drojiping a 1111 P ljint Kenu away to Kentucky's i ‘ iiird ranking t am nationally, will -ake cn the nation's number one team here Tuesday night at 7:31' o'clock in Bowman Gymnasium ai the Great Lakes Bluejackets invad*
-he Tiger lair.
Coae'i Lloyd Messersinith’s Tiger, lost a 45 to 26 game to the Blue jackets at Great Lakes during ai early season slump that cost then additional los e to Purdue and In diana. Since the loss to Great Lake on December 22 the Tigers have los only to Kentucky in winning eight o nine games, bringing ther season re cord to 11 victories and five defeats The Tigers suffered a recurrent <;.' their slitting slump during th. first half of the r clash with the Di auw Naviators, trailing at the hal 18 to 17, having hit only three out o 36 shots, but they came back strong in the second half to ou’put tha
j Naviators 26 to 11.
1 Undefeated, with seven straigh* J Indiana conference victories, D* I Pauw will have a chance to cinct
HOLLYWOOD, heb. 11. (UP) j [ b e Indiana conference crown Thurs Charlie Chaplin dug deep today for j ciay niK , lt F( , b t7 when Wabash
College plays here. The Tigers arc still undefeated on their homo floo:
this season.
Bowma’i Gymnu'sium war packed with nearly 3,000 fans for the De Pauw Tiger DePauw V-5 clash, bu‘
Chaplin Held On Serious Charge
Sycamores Meet Casemen Monday
plans are being .nsdo to accommodate additional spectators fot
HEBRON I phasis on the baby she claims is his, , Tuesday’s game with the Bluejack-
I the two abortions she underwent, e ts, Perry and ! ant * ^ er experiences with alleged
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
daughter returned home Saturday | Beeping Toms in blue coats, whom
ter past two I she charged with undressing her * pHJNAM SOLDIER BOY’S
weeks with relatives in Indianapo- I while she languished as a vagrant in j jig < | Beverh Hills' model jail. :
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Robbins and Having spent weeks listening to ~
1 . ^ r, ... i Mr. and Mrs. John Nelson family of Fincastle moved to the " "
PICTURE IN MAGAZINE
The poweiful Indiana State basketball quintet, victors in 17 to 18 games played this season, wiil appear here next Monday night ir Bowman gym to battle the Naval Flight School cadets in the last horn game of the season for Lt. Everett N. Case’s aggregation. Indiana State, coached by the wily Glenn Curtis, formerly of Martinsville, hold a 52 to 40 decision over the calets in their first meeting at Ter c Haute early in January. After being edged out by the DePauw Tigers Wednesday- night, the :adets will be in no mood to permit State to repeat the January performance. The cadets will be in quest of heir eighteenth win of the season in this game and it will be a battle oi Case vs. Curtis as the two clubs line ip Monday night. One of the best lattle.s of the year is on tap for reencastle and Putnam county bai-1 ;etball fans. I Case and Curtis hav** turned wit some of thr best prep teams in th * state at Fiankfort and Martinsville in the past. Case tutoring four Frankfort teams to the state title, and Curtis producing three state winners at Martinsville. These two mentors often fought it out in the j state tourney for the state championship. The V-5 cadets had been coming dong in good shape with wins over Bunker Hill Valparaiso and Wabash in the past few weeks, but were handicapped by the absence of Cadet Tom Polum in their game with the Tigers. Polum will be out of action for the remainder of the season due to an ankle injury sustained in practice Monday. However, Lt. Case hopes to find a suitable replacement in time for the Indiana State fracas.
(■RAN All ,\ SATURDAY ONLY s
JOHNNY MACK BltOWl,'
■rniirrma—-r* J *anriirMmrr-- q
Inge farm last week.
Mr. and Mrs. mid family 'if Sunday dinner
Mrs. Ed Clodfelter. I million d illai movie fortune. Frank Evavnian i > I Paul McGaug- j The jurors namvd him as a violating accompanied John A. Harbison ^ or of the Mann Act, because they to Greencastle Friday where they said he transported Miss Barry
Madison township have discovered a full page picture of their son Ken-
I travails, the jurors threw the hook j
Norman Clodfelter I at the British pantomimist who ran!
Indi napoiis were ! a pair of baggy pants, a malacca i ni th ' 1,1 1 e ■■ mum s .,1 of Lit. gu. ,t Mr. and; cane and a sad smile into a multi- ma » azlne ' U was taken 0,1 thL ’
I battle field of Liri, and the reading
attended an AAA meeting. Harold Flint of the Navy and
wife and Mr. and Mrs. Thr..-'. Flint of Greencastle spent Sunday after-
noon with Mrs. Sophia Wilson
R. K Drag ro s.
Ralph
Mr. and Mr
nr.d daughter of Bainbridge, and Mr. and Mrs ('has..Gardner of Mor- I ton called on Mr. and Mrs. Fred 1
across state lines for immoral purposes. They charged him with trying to use undue influence upon a judge who sentencerl her to jail for at I vagrancy, and they accused him, the i jurlge, himself, and several otheis
matter accompanying the story sai.l: “Yesterday’s battle field is quiet in the morning sun as an American soldier washes his face with a handkerchief. In the shell-torn Liri valley tents have been pitched beside shell holes and shattered trees. Other marks of the war in Italy are the dead horses in the fields, gray
' lodtelter t w jtb conspiring to deprive her of her
civil rights.
The Mann Act counts said that . Chaplin twice violated the law; that
Dahlgren Sunday. Mrs. Dahigren is | firBt on 0ct 6 1942 .. he feloniously
transported and caused to be transl ported Joan Barry from Los Angeles to the city of New York” for immor-
rblc to be
in her wheel chair.
HKK K ( IIA PEL .METHODIST
( III K< II
Sunday school, 10 a. m. Morning worship. 11 a. m. The members and friends of Brick Chapel are invited to hear Byron A. Bas-
tin speak Fountain.'
Evening Youth Fellowship will
al purposes, ami that second, he brought her back three weeks later, j The disclosure of the trip to New York, presumably together, was a surprise in the chain of eye-poppers
; “The Ever Springing i uncovered by the indictment. Tnc Text: John 4:13-14. j junket had not been mentioned be-
. tore and none of the pr incipals had
meet at 6:30 at the church.
II \RI.AN FUNERAL
Kuneial services for Mis. Constance Hinkle Harlan, will be held Satin lay afternoon at 2 o'clock from j the MeCurry Funeral Home. The j
even intimated that the trip figured in the case. Should the White-haired, 54-year-old Chaplin be found guilty on all counts, he could lie subjected to a $15 000 fine, 15 years in federal prison, one year in county jail, and probable deportation to England as
Rev Williar.. McKeehan will tie in J an undesirable alien. charge. Burial will be in the Clinton I
Kails cemetery.
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I HEEESVII.EE METHODIST ( III KC II I red S. Wintel, Pastor Service Sunday, Feb. 13, Race Relations Day 10 A. M. Church Schfsil. Ewing Waxier, Supt. Lesson “Jesus on the mountain and in the valley" Junior Church object lesson "Valentine Story” 11 . M. Morning Worship. Sermon by the Pastor: “He hath made of one blood" 6:30 P. M. Youtli Fellowship meeting Betty Aker, Pres. Valentine’s Day program. 7:30 P. M. Evening Worship Ser-
vice.
Another "one-night Revival" and song sing Our church welcomes you.
NT' , a—cactiia?- -
BASKETBALL INDIANA STATE vs. NAVAL FLIGHT SCHOOL Monday. February 14 Bowman (jJ Prelminary game 7 P. M. Varsity game 8:15 p | ADMISSION, ADULTS 55c - STUDENTS 25c This is the lust home game of the season for the ( adrL and should be a thriller. JMabMKNNBUSflSK-
Bowling
Friday—7:00 O’clock Coca Cola vs. University B.
W
L
Pet.
Elite!'a
.... 40
17 •
.700
University A
.... 39
18
.684
Zinc Mill
... 34
23
,59 7
Midwest
... 34
26
.566
Coca Cola
.... 32
25
.56’
Bluejackets
... 32
25
.561
Home Laundry
29
31
.483
Public Service .
.. 27
33
.450
Lone Star
.... 23
37
.383
Post Office
... 21
36
.363
University B
21
39
.350
O. K. Barbers
20
40
.333
between parent and child. Cecil Fellers, president, preside ! at the meeting. Reports were giver, on Liberty Ship activities and the proposed recreation center. Mrs. Kenneth West, Mrs. Sheridan, and Mrs. -Schaffer were appointed on
the nominating ]:n-..tt(J Grafton Longden pr< - Hildebrand, who gave '.her Mr. Sta.pley intrndun Mr.i Liddle to the group. After Mr. Li.!.: : *!k. :J a general discu. -n p'-rxil
NET SCHEDULE Friday Greencastle at Wiley Cloverdale at Roachdale Bainbridge at Russellville Belle Union at Stilesville Saturday DePauw V-5 vs. DePaul at Chicago HIGH SCHOOL I*. T. A. Culminating a two-day conference period, Mr. Frank M. Liddle of Indianapolis, state secretary of the Y M. C. A., addressed members of t’i * High School P. T. A. on Tuesday evening. Fob. 8. "A Talk to Parents’ was the title of Mr. Liddle's inspiring talk in v> hich he discussed th-' results of his conferences vvtt’i local high chool students Friday on the whole a healthy attitude among students t ward their problems of conduct, he urged better understanding
FEATHERS at WAR! • Urgant Need for FEATHERBEDS ... Our boyt nued tuo*h»rtlll»d slumping bags and /lying suits. Ouoss and Duck l.ath.rt want.d —old or n.w. Far tap prica and •hipping instruction* mail small •ampla at faathart in ordinary anvalop* to: E. F. BUR RLE N last St., Indianapolis 4, Ind. We rgfuna thipping charge*/
l\< iiiiHIi Nelson patches of powder burns on the hillsides. abandoned rifles and grenades in the bushes, thousands of fox holes, imply (U r . ■ rubbish heaps of Cration cans an., crude graves of dead men. Even the old Italian cemeteries have been molested. The Germans use them for artillery positions.” The picture shows Kenneth kneeling before a metal wash-pan washing his face, but he knows his picture is bring taken and he has a grin on his face and appears to lie looking out one corner of his eyes. Friends of Kenneth living in Clay county found and recognized the picture and sent it to the parents.
) Delta Kappa Gamma | Meets Saturday Evening Delta Kappa Gamma will meet Sat- | uiday evening. Feb. 12, at 7.30 with Miss Leah Curnett, 408 east Seminwill discuss “Better Selection of Better Teachers ”
You Need Them Now! + KEEP WARM + SAVE FUEL STORM SASH-STORM DOOKl These “Hard To Get” Items Are Now In Stock! ALL SIZES FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CALL 403 TODAY. + Allan Lumber Co j'
Is Eyestrain holding You Back? Eyentrain because it saps your energy—hampers your effleieney at work a.nd leads to costly errors, one thing you should know about. Dr. J. F. Conrad OPTOMETRIST l«t) E. Wash. St. Phone 240
CHATEAU THEATRE - FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
For VALENTINE GIFTS HUNTINGTON JEWELRY STORE GLASCOCK BLDG.
* Burnette and Gene Autry, as they appear in "'-i-elease, “Tumbling TnmbleweRNJs''
ReP
