The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 December 1944 — Page 4
CHATEAU IONITE THRU THURS. You'll Like This A Swell Comedy
ALAN
LORAINE
Marshal Day MARSHA HUNT, ALI.YN JOSUYN, EDGAR BUCHANAN, SLIM SUMMERVILLE in "BRIDE
MISTAKE"
Abto Cartoon and News.
_ 1 roi’XTS with th<> estate of euhl 1 THESE EGGS WILL SCRAMBLE TOKYO i anti there make proof of heir ship, and receive their distributive
shares.
Hoy C. Hutherlln, I Administrator, De Bonis Non 1 W1TNHSS. the .Clerk of said Court, this 18th day of Dec., 1944. No. 7508. Onier C. Akers, Clerk Putnam Circuit Court. 19-2t.
Bowling
BOWLING
SPORTS NEWS
(By Jim Zeis)
BASKETBALL
Wednesday 6:30 p. m.—Stevens vs. V. F.
8:30 p. m.—University C vs. OK Barbers. Thursday 7 p. m.—Eitel’s vs. Coca Cola Friday 7 p. m.—Zinc Mill vs. University B.
Banner Adv. Pays
AT THE 21 ST BOMBER command headquarters on Saipan island, roost of the ^‘-20 8, just a few of the thousands upon thousands of heavy bombs which the Superforts shuttle from Saipan to Tokyo are shown lined up as ordnance men load trailer with the eggs to be put aboard B-29's for the Tokyo run. Army Air Forces photo. (International)
BASKETBALL! TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19 BOWMAN GYM
STANDING (Including last night’s games) W I,
8
10 13 13 16 17 18 19 17 18 18 19
Eitel’s 22 Stevens 20 Coca Cola 17 V. F. W 17 University A 17 Midwest 16 Home Laundry 15 Post Office 14 University C 13 O. K. Barbers 12 Zinc Mill 12 University B 11
6:00 P. M. Purdue Reserves vs. DePauw Reserves
7:30 P. M. Purdue vs. DePauw
General Admission 50c <Tax Int ‘ ,uded .) School Children 24c (Tax In ‘*» d ® d )
U. S. ADULTS COMPRISE TWO-THIRDS POPULATION
M 1*2NT or FM ATF NOTH ’K I.SJ1KKKHY GIVEN to the CreditorsC Heirs and LeKuteen of Henry II. Holloway, deceased it appear in the Putnam Circuit Court, held at Greencastle, Indiana. on the 15th day of January, 1945, and show cause, if any, why »lt FINAL SETTLEMENT AC•’GENTS with the estate of said tit cedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heir ship, and receive their distributive
shn res.
John O. FUghtsell. Admr. WITNESS, the Clerk of said Court, Uiis 18th day of Dec., 1944.
No. 8494.
omer c. Akers. Clerk Putnam
Circuit Court.
Gillen & Lyon, Attys. ' 19-21. NOTH I. or FINAL SETTLE-
MENT or ENTATE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to! he. Creditors, Heirs and Legatees' Emma Garrett, deceased t o
i • v m the Putnam Circuit slightly larger proportion of men ' : r ';.u"Z women were in the voting ■I .'mil shew .mu.-. . if iiny, why age group. No'.v, however, the
Life
till!
Ilf
liie i-’INAI, BKTTI.ICJ1KNT AC-
NEW YORK (UP)—Almost two-thirds of the people of the United States are 21 years old or older, an indication of the steadily increasing proportion of the population of voting age, ae- | cording to a recent statistical
report.
In 1920, when women first ; voted, about 58 per cent of the ! population could vote and
Tiger Squad To
Play In Boston
The DePauw University T.gers step into big-time competition again on Saturday, Dec. 23, when they meet Holy Crocs at Boston. The two teams will share .loners with Yale and Dartmouth, Ivy League rivals whose game makes up the other half of the bill at Boston Garden. DePauw, w.th 13 six-footers to 18 on the Holy Cross sqi.Hd, will be fresh from its second encounter with the Boilermakers of (Purdue. The Tigers will havj the opening crack at the strong Crusaders of Holly Cross for teams in the Indiana ColJ.'giati circuit, as Valparaiso, which tied with DePauw for state collegiate honors la-,t year, does not travel to Boston Garden until 3an. 25. Coach Lloyd Messersmith's netmen will be the first DePauw team to meet Holy Cross In basketball competition. Tiger starts B.ll Walton, guard; Earl Gardner, forward: Dick Lahr, center: John Longfellow, guard. Fred Smith, guard; Richard Dickel, forward, and Stanley London, forward, will have a chance to show their stuff before one of the largest basketball audiences of the season in the
Koston Garden game.
SKUNK STARTS CLEAN-UP
a
look 10 e«ct*J£!H
^ CH 7
"MY WASHING IS DOING ITSELF" . . ."while IVn away from
home enjoying this fine Monday morning!"
KEARNEY, Neb. „ (UP)— Water Supt. Ralph Lancaster nad to drain the city reservoir and clean the water mains recently. Lancaster reported to the city council that two boys
Metropolitan Life Insurance htttl caught a skunk near the end statisticians say, the women of 11,6 d,ain P'P e fronl the reserhave a slight edge in numbers. voir - Th c end of the pipe is
They attribute the increased sonieSOO feet from the reservoi \
proportion of adults in the popu- Nevertheless, scores of citizens lation to a long-term downward ' a*led the water superintendent’s trend of the birth rate, thv in- offlc e complaining about a vile
crease in the average length of in the water.
life and sharp curtailment of im-1
migration in recent decades.
2,758 I’HO UNITS IN U. S. ! NEW’ YORK (UP)—United Service Organizations had a total of2,758 operations in the Continental United States, as of October, including 145 troop-in-iransit lounges. 1.840 USO clubs and 115 mobile service units, according to a report submitted to Dr. Lindsley F. Kimball, adt mlnistrative vicb president, at national headquarters here. The USO is the principal beneficiary , of the National War Fund and 5 has been in existence almost four i years, as the movement was begun shortly after the forces of the United States began mobilization.
Purdue Meets Old Gold Here
DePauw’s basketball Tigers, standing with Ball State at the top of the Indiana Collegiate Conference, steps out of line again tonight when they defend the honor of the Old Gold on the homecourt against Purdue’s Bailermakers. This will be the fourth game for the Tigers against big-league competition, and the second game with Purdue The Boilermakers downed the Old Gold on Dec. 13 with J 47-31 victory. DePauw's forrays into bigleague competition this year have resulted in one victory, a 51-50 decision over Indiana University on Dec. 5. Northwestern ropped the Tigers by 13 points in a game there on Dec. 9. The DePauw team, which has managed only three victories over Purdue in net competition which began in 1906, should be in better form on their home court. It will be a double-feature night for DePauw fans, for the Tiger-Boilermaker game, which begins at 7:30, will be preceded by a game between the “B” teams of the two schools. Game time for the preliminary battle is 6:00 p. m. This will be fTie second game of the season for DePauw’s “B” team, which lost tc Stout Field in a 51-50 decision last Friday in a home contest.
PROGRAM TO GLOW IN DARK
NEW YORK (UP) — The strain of reading theater programs in the dark will be eliminated for theatergoers of the future by the use of phosphor rscent pigments in the paper or •'nk of the program. The program will glow much as the luminescent maps used by wartime navigators of the air and sea, Business Week says.
Your ELECTRIC automatic Home Laundry will be ready soon after V-Day No more wash day drudgery when the automatic home-laundry is installed in your Electric home of tomorrow. No, you can’t have otie now but as soon as the war is over, this, and other amazing electrical devices, will be ready for you. It’s no dream gadget. . . it’s all ready to go . . . the experimental work is all completed , . . it’s just a matter of waiting until factories can turn from wartime to peacetime production. Lay your plans now for this and other ’’better-living” appliances that electricity will
bring to your home.
SEE YOUR DEALER — Sales of appliances will be made only through dealers. We have discontinued our policy of direct selling. However, we will cooperate wholeheartedly with local Dealers and Contractors, and where assistance is needed, we will be alert to provide service, assist with installations, and supply home service experts
for advice and instruction.
GI ‘TOURS’ ALASKA ANCHORAGE. Alaska (UP) War brought Pfc. John White to Alaska, but failed to prevent Him from having an automobile to drive around Anchorage wane off duty An ingenous mechanic, White bought a stalled jalopy for $40 and to it added parts from six old Model T’s and a 3922 Oldsmobile. The result f.pelled Bouncing Bertha, which can do 45 miles an hour on two gallons of gas and has a pickup of at least three girls per block. Rub-a-Tub
ELECTION EXAMINATION INDIANAPOLIS, Dec. 19 — (UP)—A potential word duel between U. S. Sen. Thomas Stewart, D., Tenn., and Indiana Attorney General James A. Em. mert promised today to highlight the concluding session ol the senatorial hearing of charges that irregularities occurred in the Indiana election. E.nmert, absent from yesterday’s sessions, had a subpena tc appear today «• a witness. (In view of Stewart's remarks as presiding figure in the hearing, in which he referred to Em. mert as ’’officious” and repeatedly questioned a state attorney general’s authority to countermand orders of the state election board, observers saw a strong possibility that the two would clash. Em mert, a republican, previously assailed the investigation as an “inquisition by brow-beat-ing methods” and questioned the authority of the senate committee,, headed by Sen. Theodore F. Green, D„ R. I., to study anything except campaign expenditures. The hearing boiled down mon. or less to the question of who had the authority to interpret the election laws—Emmert, or Gov. Henry F. Schricker and David M. Lewis, Jr., the Democratic members of the state election board. Emmert claimed that previous Attorneys General had substantially made the same ruling and that custom had set a precedent in the use of certificates of error, which actually^ were not provided by the election laws. Schricker and Lewis said they ordered the affidavits to be accepted because election interpretations issued in a pamphlet form by the board and concurred in by the state party chairmen, specifically authorized their use. Sen. Joseph R. Ball, R., Minn., the other member of the Green committee at the hearing, played a minor role in the opening session. Robert T. Murphy, chief counsel for the committee, questioned witnesses. POTATO WEIGHS 7 LBS. BONHAM, Tex. (UP) — Farmer Ernest Chaffin is exhibiting the ‘‘King of Sweet Potatoes.’’ The yam weighs seven pounds and four ounces, and measuring 21 Vi ' inches | around the short way and 26 inches the long way. REFUGEES REACH PALESTINE NEW YORK (UP)—During the first week of November 1,000 Jewish refugees entered Palesl tine, bringing to 56,000 the num- | ber who have sought refuge there since the war began. The newcomers included 537 Romanian, Hungarian and Polish , Jews; 404 German. Dutch, Belgian, Greek and Spanish Jewr,
LAST SHOWING!
This'll Put a Smil, m Your Eye.-.Qi,,) Song in Your Heart! ’mmor-H/fik non myms
v SB WISH ms 4K 1
with PORKLIAR movie pests, y
COMING Wednesday & T /^ndlelidit ALGERIA X 20-h Century-Foi Be'Mti
with STRIFE OF PMtn MOVIE PESTS AND
Special Christinas At 3 P. M. FRI. “DANCING M “LIFE WITH “NITE LIFE IN ARMY”
“Nlntise Of Tomomi “Shipyard g.vnipittfi — ADMISSION - j ANV THING V01 V TO DON ATE TO 1 CHRISTMAS BA Tit be distrihutfd by Welfare Swirly. COME AND DO l PART SO OTHER! EN JOY A MERIT CHRISTMAS TOft
and 30 Burkhamite J* Jewish Agency for whose American sup rived from the UnM Appeal spent J3.l71.Stl kef and tescue of ref mg the first nine ni1944.
IN SAARLAUTERN, Germany, two medics of the 95th Division of the U. S. Third Army taste their first German beer in a captured Nazi brewery. Pfc. Sidney Goldstein, left, of New York City and Pfc John Planchak, Clairton, Pa., “roll out the barrell” and relax with > couple of mugs. (International Soumlnhoto, HOW B-29'S CARRY WAR TO JAPAN
PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF INDIANA, INC.
Give another WAR BOND this Christmas and mark itt“Convert this into an
automatic
Electric Washing Machine
es soon es
peacetime comes”
THE ELECTRIC HOUR, starring NELSON EDDY, will be heard over your favorite CBS station every Sunday at 3:30 p.m., GW.T.
ON THEIR WAY to gladden the heart of every housewife are bright new metal wash tubs, the first In two years from the American Can company's plant In Atlanta, Ga., which has been shut down due to metal reatrlcttone affecting this product. The worker above is “seaming” bottom of (International)
There’s quite a simple solution to the case of those "disappearing” telephones .. . that new one you wanted installed, the extra connection upstairs you’ve been wanting. Among the most important of the many things needed to achieve Victory are communications materials... in unbelievably vast quantities. Please be patient if your name is on our whiting list for telephone installations. We, too, are anxious to fill your request. And as equipment becomes available, applications will be filled in the order filed.
WHEN NEWEST CYCLE of Tokyo bomblnga from Saipan island (1) i began Nov. 23, B-29 ftiparfortresaes had engaged In 18 major air attacks plus original Tokyo blast on April 18, 1942. Previously, at-1 tacks had been launched from China (2) or India from which new' raid on Thailand (Slam) (3) was made. Circles on map Indicate most) effecUvs bombing radius of B-29's although tip of Korea was hit! during flight. June 15 marked beginning of Fortress campaign on Japan, with sush visits U> become mors frequent. (International,
INDIANA ASSOCIATED TELEPHONE CORPORATION GREENCA8TLK, INDIAN'
